2004-2005-2006-2007
THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM
(Circulated by the authority of the Parliamentary
Secretary to the Treasurer,
the Hon Chris Pearce MP)
Glossary                                                                                                               v
General outline and financial impact................................................................ 1
Chapter 1 Financial Services Regulation..................................................... 15
Chapter 2 Company Reporting Obligations................................................. 37
Chapter 3 Auditor Independence................................................................... 53
Chapter 4 Corporate Governance................................................................. 73
Chapter 5 Fundraising.................................................................................... 79
Chapter 6 Takeovers.................................................................................... 105
Chapter 7 Compliance.................................................................................. 109
Chapter 8 Regulation impact statement:Â financial services
regulation............................................................................ 113
Chapter 9 Regulation impact statement:Â thresholds for
reporting for large proprietary companies  139
Chapter 10 Regulation impact statement:Â rights issues and
employee share schemes        151
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ASIC
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Australian
Securities and Investments Commission
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CLERP 9 Act
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Corporate
Law Economic Reform Program (Audit Reform and Corporate Disclosure) Act 2004
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ESS
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Employee Shareholder Scheme
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ITAA 1936
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Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
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PDS
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Product Disclosure Statement
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RIS
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Regulation Impact Statement
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ROA
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Record of Advice
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SOA
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Statement of Advice
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Overview
The Corporations Legislation Amendment
(Simpler Regulatory System) Bill 2007 and supporting Bills contain a range of
measures to simplify and streamline Australia’s corporate and financial
services laws. The package contains amendments that will:
·
implement the Australian Government’s response to several
recommendations made in the Rethinking Regulation report of the Taskforce on
Reducing the Regulatory Burden on Business, relevant to corporate and financial
services regulation;
·
amend various provisions of the Corporations Act 2001 (Corporations
Act) and related Acts to improve the efficiency of corporate and financial
services regulation, based on the proposals outlined in the Corporate and
Financial Services Regulation Review Proposals Paper of November 2006; and
·
make various other minor and technical amendments to the
Corporations Act and related Acts.
The main Bill contains nearly all of the
amendments. The Corporations (Fees) Amendment Bill 2007 and the Corporations
(Review Fees) Amendment Bill 2007 are supporting Bills which contain minor
amendments regarding chargeable matters in support of some measures in the main
Bill, and a measure to introduce a facility for up-front payment of annual
review fees. Those measures are required to be in separate Bills for
constitutional reasons.
Unless indicated otherwise, references in
this document to a Bill are to the main Bill.
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1.      Financial Services Regulation
The Bill will reduce the regulatory burden
on providers of financial services, increase access to financial advice and
make improvements to other aspects of the financial services regulatory
framework. The changes include:
·
removing the need for a Statements of Advice to be provided in
two circumstances:Â where there is no recommendation in relation to a
particular financial product and no remuneration; and where the amount to which
the advice relates is under the prescribed threshold;
·
refining the circumstances where a Financial Services Guide is
not required to be provided, particularly at seminars;
·
introducing changes to the retail/wholesale client distinction
regarding sophisticated investors and in relation to investments in pooled
superannuation trusts;
·
refining the cross-endorsement provisions;
·
introducing a new ‘in use’ notice for Product Disclosure
Statements;
·
improving the mechanism whereby the Australian Securities and
Investments Commission (ASIC) takes a role in overseeing compliance with a
financial market’s rules where the market operator has a conflict of interest;
and
·
allowing registered managed investment schemes to invest in
unregistered managed investment schemes.
Date of effect:Â Some
amendments commence on Royal Assent. Others commence on a date to be fixed by
proclamation or otherwise six months after Royal Assent.
Proposal announced:Â The
proposals were announced in the Corporate and Financial Services Regulation
Review Proposals Paper of November 2006 (the Proposals Paper). Their origin is
in Proposals 1.2-1.4, 1.6-1.7 and 1.9-1.12 of the Proposals Paper. These
proposals have been refined in the light of comments made in response to that
paper. The amendments also reflect the Government’s response to Recommendation
5.17 of the Rethinking Regulation report of the Taskforce on Reducing
the Regulatory Burden on Business, released in August 2006 (the Banks report).
Financial impact:Â Aside from some
consequential changes to ASIC fees that may result in a negligible financial
impact, the amendments have no financial impact.
Compliance cost impact:Â The amendments are
expected to reduce cost burdens for a number of financial services licensees,
which are expected to result in cost savings for their clients. An example is
the potential cost reduction for licensees of providing advice to clients with
relatively small amounts to invest, and to sophisticated investors. There are
likely to be some initial costs for product issuers in moving to the new ‘in
use’ notice but, once the electronic mechanism is implemented, the cost of
using it is likely to be less than the cost of the current arrangements.
Summary of regulation impact statement
Regulation impact on business: Statement of Advice threshold and product
activity and data collection
Impact:Â The Statement of
Advice threshold measure will impact financial service providers in the
provision of personal advice and consumers of financial advice. The product
activity and data collection measure will primarily impact financial product
issuers.
Main points:
Statement of advice threshold
·
The problem to be addressed in the Statement of Advice threshold
measure is that consumers who wish to obtain financial advice in relation to a
relatively small investment amount are unable to access or afford financial
advice because of the relatively high cost of providing such advice.
·
The threshold proposed is linked to the point at which it becomes
commercially viable for an adviser to provide advice, based on recovering the
cost of preparing a Statement of Advice.Â
·
The result of the measure is expected to be increased consumer
access to affordable financial advice, without compromising investor
protection.
Product activity and data collection
·
The problem which the product activity and data collection
measure seeks to address relates to the costs associated with lodging product
disclosure in-use notices, compared with the regulatory benefit from ASIC
receiving such notices.
·
The measure included in the Bill will improve the regulatory
usefulness and efficiency of the product disclosure in-use notice system and
reduce compliance burdens on business.
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2Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Company Reporting Obligations
The Bill will simplify company reporting
obligations to reduce compliance costs for companies. The changes include
amendments to:
·
incorporate in the Corporations Act the accounting standards
requirements for executive and director remuneration disclosure;
·
increase the thresholds used to define a large proprietary
company and allow for future changes to the thresholds to be prescribed by
regulations;
·
change the notification requirements, payment of annual fees and
the company deregistration procedure; and
·
allow companies to make annual reports available on the internet
and only require hard copies to be sent to members who request them.
Date of effect:Â The bulk
of the changes will commence on Royal Assent. Some provisions, however, have
specific application provisions. These are:
·
amendments regarding executive remuneration will apply to
financial years that begin on or after commencement;
·
changes to thresholds for reporting for large proprietary
companies will take effect in the financial year that ends on or after
commencement;
·
changes to requirements for companies to inform ASIC when
officeholders change, to provide for a company using a contact address and to
provide for regulations allowing a single lump sum payment of annual review
fees will commence on a date to be proclaimed, or if no date is proclaimed, six
months after Royal Assent;
·
amendments regarding distribution of annual reports apply to a
financial year that ends on or after commencement.
Proposal announced:Â The
amendments regarding reporting of executive remuneration disclosures,
thresholds for reporting of large proprietary companies, changes to
officeholders, maintenance of company addresses, review fees associated with
voluntary administration, up-front payment of annual review fees and electronic
distribution of annual reports are based on proposals outlined in the Proposals
Paper of November 2006. The amendments regarding executive remuneration
disclosures, electronic distribution of annual reports and thresholds for
reporting of large proprietary companies were announced in the Government’s response
to the Banks Report, released in August 2006.
Financial impact:Â Nil.
Compliance cost impact:Â The amendments are
expected to reduce costs burdens for a large proportion of Australian
companies. In particular, companies affected by the increase in thresholds for
reporting by large proprietary companies and those that wish to take advantage
of the facility to distribute annual reports electronically are likely to
benefit from significant compliance cost savings.
Summary of regulation impact statement
Regulation impact on business:Â thresholds for reporting by large
proprietary companies
Impact:Â This measure will
affect large proprietary companies (that is, large companies that are not
public companies).
Main
points:
·
The increase to the threshold for financial reporting will mean
approximately 1,600 fewer large proprietary companies will be required to lodge
their annual reports with ASIC.
·
The main costs of the measure arise from the increased risk of
direct users of accounts losing confidence in the affected companies due to a
reduction in publicly available financial information. As the companies
concerned are not economically significant, this is not considered to be a
major concern.
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3.      Auditor Independence
The Bill will make changes to the auditor
independence provisions of the Corporations Act. The changes fall into three
categories:
·
rectification of a number of anomalies and unintended
consequences that have been identified during the implementation of the Corporate
Law Economic Reform Program (Audit Reform and Corporate Disclosure) Act 2004
(the CLERP 9 Act);
·
incorporation into the framework of several improvements arising
out of public consultations on the comparative review of Australia’s auditor
independence requirements; and
·
making a number of miscellaneous amendments designed to improve
the effectiveness of the auditor independence requirements in the light of
operational experience since the requirements were introduced by the CLERP 9
Act.
Date of effect:Â The
provisions commence on Royal Assent. However, some provisions have specific
application provisions:
·
amendments relating to the time when an auditor’s independence declaration
must be given apply to a report for a financial year that ends on or after
commencement;
·
amendments which will give effect to a ‘covered person’ approach
in relation to the auditor independence restrictions on financial relationships
will apply to an audit of the financial report for a reporting period beginning
on or after commencement;
·
the amendments which will modify the way in which the two‑year
‘cooling‑off’ period is calculated and the amendment to the multiple
former audit partner restriction will apply to any person who ceases to be a
member of an audit firm, a director of an audit company or a professional
employee of an audit company, whether the person so ceases before or after the
day on which those amendments commence; and
·
the amendments which will give ASIC the power to extend the
period within which an auditor is required to resolve a conflict of interest
situation will apply in relation to information given to ASIC on or after the
day the amendments commence.
Proposal announced:Â The
rectification of the anomalies identified during the implementation of the
CLERP 9 Act is based on proposals appearing in the Proposals Paper of November
2006. The amendments relating to the multiple former audit firm partner
restriction, the ‘cooling‑off’ period for retiring audit partners and the
introduction of a ‘covered person’ approach in relation to restrictions on
financial relationships are based on submissions received from key stakeholders
during the public consultation process on the discussion paper Australian
Auditor Independence Requirements:Â A Comparative Review which the
Government released in November 2006. The proposal to review the multiple
former audit firm partner restriction was also announced in the Government’s
response to the Banks Report released in August 2006.
Financial impact:Â Nil.
Compliance cost impact: Â The
amendments are expected to reduce compliance costs for auditors and their
clients by removing some onerous regulatory requirements regarding auditor
independence.
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4.      Corporate Governance
The Bill will make amendments to the
Corporations Act to remove burdensome member approval requirements in relation
to small transactions between public companies and related parties. It will
also allow delegation to ASIC of certain administrative functions regarding
identical or unacceptable company names, and approval of changes to certain
corporate constitutions. This will streamline administrative processes for
corporations.
Date of effect:Â The
amendments regarding related party transactions apply to financial years
commencing on or after 1 July 2007. The amendments allowing delegation of
administrative functions to ASIC will commence on 1 July 2007.
Proposal announced:Â The
removal of member approval requirements for certain related party transactions
is based on proposals appearing in the Proposals Paper of November 2006.
Financial impact:Â Nil.
Compliance cost impact:Â The amendments will reduce compliance costs for the affected
corporations by removing member approval requirements and streamlining
administrative processes.
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5.      Fundraising
This Bill contains six measures to amend
a number of provisions in the Corporations Act relating to fundraisings by
corporate entities. The amendments are generally intended to facilitate such
fundraisings by various means, including:Â abolishing unnecessary disclosure
requirements; removing inconsistencies between different parts of the
Corporations Act; or amending the time periods and amounts that can be raised
under particular provisions.
Date of effect:Â The date
of effect varies between measures. Generally the amendments will come into
force either upon Royal Assent or at the latest six months after Royal Assent.
Proposal announced:Â The
measures were first canvassed in the ‘Corporate and Financial Services
Regulation Review’ Consultation Paper released in April 2006. The
measures are based on proposals included in the Proposals Paper released by the
Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer in November 2006.
Financial impact:Â Nil.
Compliance cost impact:Â Compliance costs were
estimated for two of the measures. The impact of the measure amending the
disclosure provisions applying to rights issues would constitute a significant
saving compared to the costs imposed under the current framework due to the
abolishment of the prospectus requirement. The measure relating to employee
unlisted share schemes would result in a significant saving compared to the
costs imposed under the current framework due to reduced disclosure
requirements and other regulatory relief granted under the measure.
Summary of regulation impact statement
Regulation impact on business
Impact:Â The measure to
amend the disclosure provisions applying to rights issues for quoted securities
and interests in managed investment schemes will affect listed entities raising
funds through a rights issue. The measure relating to employee share schemes
will affect listed and unlisted entities taking advantage of the relief
provided to establish and operate an employee share scheme.
Main points:
·
With respect to the measure to amend the disclosure requirements
applying to rights issues, listed entities wishing to raise funds will be able
to do so through a rights issue without providing a prospectus. The amended
provisions require the listed entity to instead provide a notice to the market
disclosing any price-sensitive information withheld from the market (as
permitted under the Listing Rules) at the time the rights issue offers are
made. The compliance costs relating to the provision of such a notice are much
lower than those for providing a full prospectus as currently required.
·
As a result, listed entities wishing to raise funds may have an
incentive to do so through a rights issue rather than some other means, such as
a direct sale of securities or other financial products to institutional
investors. The amendment is therefore intended to benefit mainly small
shareholders, who can participate in rights issues but not in certain other
forms of fundraisings such as institutional placements which are currently
widely used.
·
With respect to the measure relating to employee share schemes,
unlisted companies offering shares to their employees through an employee share
scheme are currently subject to a range of disclosure, licensing and other
restrictions imposed under the Corporations Act. The measure will remove a
number of such restrictions, while still maintaining an appropriate level of
investor protection for employees considering participation in such a scheme.
·
As a result, there may be more unlisted companies establishing an
employee share scheme. This outcome is in accord with the Australian
Government’s policy of encouraging the wider use of employee share schemes,
which are generally considered to provide substantial benefits to the wider
economy.
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7.      Compliance
The Bill will amend the Corporations Act
to streamline compliance procedures and ensure companies can access newer
technologies. The measures include simplifying returns of company particulars
and permitting electronic registration of charges.
Date of effect:Â The amendments
permitting the electronic registration of company charges will commence on 1
July 2007. The amendments regarding returns of particulars will commence on a
date to be fixed by proclamation or otherwise six months after Royal Assent.
Proposal announced:Â The
amendments are based on proposals outlined in the Proposals Paper of November
2006.
Financial impact:Â Nil.
Compliance cost impact:Â The amendments will reduce
compliance costs for the affected corporations by limiting the circumstances in
which corporations must fill in and lodge a return of particulars, and by
reducing paperwork connected with the registration of company charges.
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Outline of chapter
1.1 The Bill
amends the Corporations Act to reduce the regulatory burden on those providing
financial services to facilitate consumer access, while maintaining investor
protection.
1.2 The
amendments primarily apply to those providing financial advice. They also
assist in:Â reducing the exposure of licensees in cases of cross-endorsement of
authorised representatives; improving the mechanism for reporting the use of
Product Disclosure Statements to ASIC; ensuring that trustees of superannuation
trusts are treated as wholesale in their dealings with pooled superannuation
trusts; and allowing registered managed investment schemes to invest in
unregistered managed investment schemes.
1.3 In
addition, they assist in maintaining the integrity of a financial market where,
for example, a company which is related to the market operator is a participant
on the market.
Context of amendments
Exemption from providing a Statement of Advice — no product recommendation
and no remuneration
1.4 Many
financial advisers provide a free initial consultation at which general
investment options may be discussed but no specific products are recommended.
1.5 Such
discussions would generally constitute the provision of personal advice under
the Corporations Act, where the exemption from financial advice for asset
allocation advice (regulation 7.1.33A of the Corporations Regulations) cannot
be relied upon.
1.6 In these
situations, it is argued that the requirement to prepare a written Statement of
Advice is onerous for the adviser and of little benefit for the client.
1.7 It has
been submitted that the requirement to produce a Statement of Advice under
these circumstances potentially distorts the provision of client focussed
advice. For example, advisers may consider that the cost of producing a
Statement of Advice is not economic in relation to a free initial consultation
where a client has a relatively small amount of money to invest. This may
result in these consumers being unable to access general strategic financial
advice.
1.8 Where a
financial adviser recommends that a person continue to hold an existing
product, such advice may also constitute personal advice even if the client is
recommended to take no action and the adviser receives no additional
remuneration.
Threshold for requiring a Statement of Advice
1.9 The
Corporations Act defines the circumstances in which personal financial advice
is provided to a client. The personal financial advice definition is triggered
if a financial service provider knows a client’s objectives, financial
situation or needs and considers that information in recommending a decision in
relation to a financial product or class of products.
1.10 The
definition of personal advice captures situations where a financial services
provider uses personal information and product information to make a
recommendation to a retail client. In those circumstances, a Statement of
Advice is required to be provided to the client.
1.11 In
certain situations, it may not be economic for an adviser to produce a
Statement of Advice if a client is seeking a minor piece of advice and/or has a
relatively small amount to invest. Many advisers are choosing not to provide
personal advice to such clients, with the result that, in these circumstances,
small‑scale consumers may not be able to access advice that may benefit
them.
Financial Services Guide exemption — general advice to the public
1.12 Where a
licensee or authorised person provides general advice to a client, usually that
person must give the client a Financial Services Guide (which describes the
services the licensee provides, information about remuneration and certain
other matters). However, subsection 941C(4) exempts the entity providing the
general advice from supplying a Financial Services Guide if the general advice
is provided in a public forum.
1.13 While the
regulations may define what constitutes a public forum for the purposes of
subsection 941C(4), the regulation requires that it needs to be open to the
public.
1.14 This
means that seminars for a subset of the public, such as the employees of a
particular business, would not be a public forum and therefore would not be
eligible for the public forum exemption.
Sophisticated investors
1.15 Subsection
761G(1) of the Corporations Act provides that a financial product or service is
provided to a client in a retail capacity except in certain circumstances. The
Corporations Act contains a number of tests to determine whether a client is
considered retail or wholesale.
1.16 For
example, when dealing in financial products (other than general insurance,
superannuation and retirement savings account products), if the individual
provides evidence that they have net assets of at least $2.5 million or gross
income in the last two financial years of at least $250,000 a year, then they
may be considered wholesale investors (paragraph 761G(7)(c) and Corporations
Regulation 7.1.28).
1.17 Additional
disclosure protections apply to retail clients only.
1.18 Although
the existing tests adequately address the circumstances of many investors,
there are some investors who are defined in the legislation as retail investors
and are unable to access wholesale status. For reasons such as experience or
professional training, these investors may wish to be treated as wholesale
investors. Such investors may consider retail disclosure an unnecessary
hindrance to activities they well understand and would prefer to access
wholesale investor status. They may also wish to access wholesale-only
products.
1.19 Subsection
708(10) of Chapter 6D of the Corporations Act already includes a mechanism
which allows a financial services licensee to be satisfied that the investor is
sufficiently experienced not to need the disclosure provided to other (retail)
persons. This status extends only to Chapter 6D which addresses disclosure in
relation to securities.
1.20 Chapter
7, which addresses financial product advice and disclosure in relation to other
financial products, does not include such a provision.
1.21 Authorised
representatives may act for a number of financial services licensees. However,
each licensee must consent to the agent being the authorised representative of
each of the other licensees. This is commonly referred to as
cross-endorsement.
1.22 The
cross-endorsement arrangements expose the endorsing licensees to joint and
several responsibility for the activities of cross‑endorsed authorised representatives
that are authorised to provide the same class of financial service (section
917C). One class of financial service is advice in relation to general
insurance.
1.23 Accordingly,
two licensees may be jointly and severally responsible for advice provided by
an agent, even if the advice relates to a type of general insurance that the
agent only handles on behalf of one of the two issuers. This means that, for
example, an authorised representative of Licensee A who only handles motor
vehicle insurance could expose Licensee A to liability in respect of, say,
conduct in relation to advice on travel insurance products offered by the
authorised representative on behalf of Licensee B.
Product activity and data collection
1.24 A Product
Disclosure Statement contains key information regarding a financial product
sold to investors. For most classes of financial product, section 1015D of the
Corporations Act requires the product issuer to lodge an ‘in use’ notice with
ASIC within five business days of the first use of the Product Disclosure
Statement. This requirement ensures ASIC is aware of all products being
promoted in the market.
1.25 ASIC
received approximately 12,000 in use notices in 2004. However, due to the
current manual lodgment mechanism, the notice does not fully serve its
regulatory purpose as it does not provide adequate means for ASIC to determine
when a Product Disclosure Statement is no longer current, for example when it
is out of date and/or when a product is withdrawn from the market.
Licensed market operators and related participants and listed bodies
1.26 Section
798C of the Corporations Act anticipates circumstances where a market licensee
may be included in the market’s official list. This would mean the market would
be self-listed.
1.27 Under
subsection 798C(2) the financial products of the market licensee can be traded
on the market if the licensee enters into an arrangement with ASIC for dealing
with possible conflicts of interest and ensuring the integrity of the trading
of the licensee’s financial products.
1.28 The
market’s listing rules must provide for ASIC instead of the licensee to make
decisions and to take action in relation to the admission of the licensee to
the market’s official list, the removal of the licensee from that list and the
allowing, stopping, or suspending of the trading on the market of the
licensee’s financial products.
1.29 In
providing for ASIC to make decisions in relation to these matters the law
addresses possible conflicts of interest which could arise in the market
licensee’s oversight of itself.
1.30 The
current law does not address a number of other possible conflict situations.
1.31 At
present the legislation does not address situations where a related body
corporate to the market licensee, a managed investment scheme whose responsible
entity is a related body corporate of the market licensee or a trust whose
trustee is a related body corporate of the market licensee wishes to be listed
on the market.
1.32 Further,
the current legislation does not address the potential conflicts which arise
because the market licensee, a related body corporate or a related partnership
is a participant in the market. The issue of a market licensee supervising
competitor participants is also not dealt with.
Pooled superannuation trusts and product disclosure
1.33 A pooled
superannuation trust is one in which the assets of a number of superannuation
funds, approved deposit funds or other pooled superannuation trusts are
invested and managed by a professional manager. Pooled superannuation trusts
can accept deposits only from complying superannuation funds, complying
approved deposit funds, and other pooled superannuation trusts. These are
regulated entities typically of significant substance and experience.
1.34 Under
section 761G of the Corporations Act, the product disclosure and associated
retail client protections in Part 7.9 apply to all investors in pooled
superannuation trusts regardless of their nature and scale. This means, for
example, that investors in pooled superannuation trusts must be given a Product
Disclosure Statement, have the benefit of a cooling off period and receive
periodic statements even if the investor is itself a large superannuation fund.
1.35 Other
financial services provided by trustees of pooled superannuation trusts are
treated differently.
Registered managed investment schemes investing in unregistered managed
investment schemes
1.36 The
responsible entity of a registered managed investment scheme may only invest
scheme property or keep scheme property invested in another managed investment
scheme if that other scheme is registered under Chapter 5C of the Corporations
Act (subsection 601FC(4)).
1.37 This
restriction is intended to prevent a responsible entity from establishing or
investing in an unregistered managed investment scheme to avoid the scheme
property protections that apply to registered managed investment schemes.
1.38 A managed
investment scheme which operates predominantly outside Australia, such as real
estate investment trusts in the United States, will generally not be a
registered managed investment scheme. Increasingly registered managed
investment schemes seek to diversify their investments among a range of foreign
collective investment structures or focus on overseas investments. Generally
such investment is not for the purpose of avoiding regulation and is directed
to the best interests of members. No such restriction applies to trustees of
superannuation funds.
1.39 There is
already ASIC Class Order relief for some kinds of investment in
Australian-based unregistered managed investment schemes.
Summary of new law and comparison of key features of new law and current
law
Exemption from providing a Statement of Advice — no product recommendation
and no remuneration
1.40 The Bill
will exempt financial services licensees from providing a Statement of Advice
in the circumstance where they provide personal advice where that advice does
not recommend a product and the adviser does not receive any remuneration for
providing that advice. Personal advice that satisfies these requirements will
be required to be documented in a Record of Advice and provided to the client
upon their request. The measure does not alter the need for the advice to be
appropriate or for the adviser to be appropriately trained to provide personal
advice.
Threshold for requiring a Statement of Advice
1.1 The Bill
will introduce a threshold into the Statement of Advice requirements, so that a
full Statement of Advice would only be required if the advice given is in
relation to an investment amount that is above a certain monetary threshold.Â
An initial threshold of $15,000 is proposed.
1.2 A
Statement of Advice will be required to be prepared and provided to a client if
the amount to which the advice relates is $15,000 or more. For advice relating
to amounts less than $15,000, the adviser will be required to provide a Record
of Advice to the client.
1.3 The Bill
will limit the application of this relief in relation to superannuation
advice. Where advice is to consolidate into, or supplement, a superannuation
fund of which the person is an existing member, the Statement of Advice
exemption may be relied on. Similar arrangements will apply to advice
regarding retirement savings accounts. Where this occurs, the Record of Advice
must disclose the matters listed in section 947D of the Corporations Act.Â
These disclosures relate primarily to charges and pecuniary interests relevant
to the client. Where the advice relates to the consolidation or supplementation
of superannuation in relation to an investment amount of $15,000 or less, the
proposal will extend to the consideration of life risk insurance associated
with the superannuation interest only.
1.4 The
existing Statement of Advice arrangements that apply to general insurance
products (including in relation to sickness and accident and consumer credit
insurance) would not be altered by this proposal. General insurance products
(other than sickness and accident and consumer credit insurance) have
previously been granted an exemption from the provision of a Statement of
Advice. It is not proposed that the threshold apply to advice in relation to
life risk insurance products (except those related to superannuation, as
mentioned above).
1.5 The
measure does not alter the need for the advice to be appropriate or for the
adviser to be appropriately trained to provide personal advice.
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Personal advice in relation to investments of $15,000 or
less is to be documented by a Record of Advice.
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All personal financial advice must be documented in a
Statement of Advice.
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Records of Advice are permissible disclosure for the
provision of both initial and further advice where that advice meets the
above conditions.
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Only further market related advice can be documented by a
Record of Advice which is to be provided to the client upon their request.
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The Record of Advice is required to contain the currently
required information.
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The Record of Advice is required to contain certain
information in relation to remuneration, interests and associations.
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Personal advice in relation to investment in
superannuation of $15,000 or less will be documented by a Record of Advice
where the advice relates to consolidation into, or supplementation of, a
superannuation fund in which the person is an existing member.
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All personal financial advice must be documented in a
Statement of Advice.
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Personal advice in relation to investment in
superannuation of $15,000 or less will be required to contain disclosures,
normally contained in a Statement of Advice (as in subsection 947D(2))
regarding charges, pecuniary interests and significant costs.
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All personal advice which recommends the replacement of
one product with another must contain disclosure in relation to charges,
pecuniary interests and significant costs (as in subsection 947D(2)).
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Financial Services Guide exemption — general advice to the public
1.1 The
amendments permit an entity which is providing general advice not to give the
client a Financial Services Guide where the general advice is provided to the
public, or a section of the public, in the manner prescribed in the
regulations.
1.2 This
means that regulations can be made which do not require that any person is
permitted to attend the event at which the general advice is given.
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The exemptions from providing a Financial Services Guide
will still be limited. However, the seminar or forum at which the general
advice is given may be open to the public or a section of the public (in the
manner prescribed in the regulations).
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The exemptions from providing a Financial Services Guide
are limited. In the case of a forum, it must be a public forum.
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Sophisticated investors
1.1 The
amendments provide for the adoption in Chapter 7 of a mechanism which will
allow an investor to be treated as a wholesale client if they satisfy a
financial services licensee that the investor is adequately experienced to be
determined a wholesale investor. The licensee would have to document the
reasons for his conclusion. The investor would need to acknowledge the effect
of being treated as a wholesale client.
1.2 The
mechanism is based on subsection 708(10) which provides such a mechanism in
Chapter 6D.
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Investors who satisfy a financial services licensee as to
their experience may be treated as wholesale clients for the purpose of
Chapter 7.Â
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There is no mechanism in Chapter 7 which would allow an
experienced investor who did not meet any of the other tests to be treated as
a wholesale client.
Such a mechanism is, however, included in Chapter 6D.
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Cross-endorsement of authorised representatives by licensees
1.1 The
amendments refine the cross-endorsement provisions so that the joint and
several responsibility of financial services licensees for the conduct of their
authorised representatives will not apply where the authorised representative
provides services in relation to different kinds or sub-classes of financial
product on behalf of each licensee (for example in relation to motor vehicle
insurance and travel insurance).
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Licensees are not jointly and severally responsible for
the conduct of their authorised representative where those representatives
provide financial services in relation to different kinds or sub-classes of
financial product by each licensee.
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Licensees which cross-endorse an authorised representative
in relation to the same class of financial product are jointly and severally
responsible for the conduct of the representative, even in circumstances
where the agents provide services in relation to different sub-classes of
financial product on behalf of the licensees.
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Product activity and data collection
1.1 The Bill
includes a revised approach for lodging ‘in use’ notices with ASIC. The
approach is an on‑line reporting mechanism for product issuers to advise
ASIC of matters relating to Product Disclosure Statement distribution.
1.2 The
measure will apply the following triggers for lodgement of the Statement (as
set out in subsection 1015D(2) of the Corporations Act): when a Product
Disclosure Statement (as defined for subsection 1015D(2)) is first given
to someone in a recommendation, issue or sale situation; when a Product
Disclosure Statement is no longer available to be given in a recommendation,
issue or sale situation; and when changes are made to the fees and charges
contained in the enhanced fee disclosure table (details of the enhanced fee
disclosure requirements are in regulations 7.9.16K, 7.9.16M and 7.9.16N as well
as in Schedule 10 of the Corporations Regulations).
1.3 The
regulations will be amended to provide that the lodgement fee for the ‘in use’
notice is payable only once when the original notice is lodged. Any subsequent
lodgements of a notice about the same Product Disclosure Statement caused by
changes to the fees and charges or due to the product no longer being available
will not require the payment of additional fees.
1.4 The
requirement commences on 1 July 2008, when ASIC has established the on-line
report and electronic lodgement mechanism. From 1 July 2008 to 1 January 2009,
both hard copy and electronic lodgement will be available. From 1 January
2009, the notices will have to be lodged electronically.
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The new subsection 1015D(2) requires the person
responsible for the Product Disclosure Statement to lodge a notice with ASIC
within five business days of: the first use of the Product Disclosure
Statement; a change to the fees and charges set out in the Product Disclosure
Statement; and cessation of the use of the Product Disclosure Statement.
It allows the notice to be lodged electronically,
commencing 1 July 2008. It requires that it be lodged electronically from 1
January 2009.
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Subsection 1015D(2) of the Corporations Act requires the
person responsible for the Product Disclosure Statement to lodge a notice
with ASIC within five business days of the first use of the Product
Disclosure Statement.
Where a Product Disclosure Statement is altered after
lodgement of the notice with ASIC, a notice relating to the Supplementary
Product Disclosure Statement is required to be lodged with ASIC.
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Licensed market operators and related participants and listed bodies
1.1 The Bill
will extend the application of the current section 798C to the licensee and
various entities which are related to the market licensee.Â
1.2 The Bill
will also enact a new provision which will provide for ASIC to take over from
the licensee in making decisions and taking action in relation to various
participants who are related to the market licensee or in competition with it.
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The new section 798C will apply not only to market
licensees, but also to a body corporate related to the market licensee, a
managed investment scheme whose responsible entity is a related body
corporate of the market licensee and a trust whose trustee is a related body
corporate of the market licensee, if they list on that market.
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Section 798C provides for market licensees who self-list
to enter into an arrangement with ASIC and to have listing rules that provide
for ASIC to make certain decisions and take certain actions.
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Section 798DA will require a market licensee’s operating
rules to provide for ASIC to make decisions and to take action where a
participant in the market is the market licensee, a related body corporate of
the market licensee or a partnership where a partner is a related entity of
the market licensee. Entities which conduct, or are a participant in, a
business that is in competition with a business conducted by the market
licensee or a related body corporate of the market licensee, will have the
option of having ASIC supervise them.
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No current law.
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Pooled superannuation trusts and product disclosure
1.1 When an
interest in a pooled superannuation trust is provided to the trustee of a
superannuation fund, an approved deposit fund, a pooled superannuation trust or
a public sector superannuation scheme that has net assets of at least $10
million, the latter will no longer be treated as retail clients for the purpose
of the product disclosure provisions. The protections provided by Part 7.9 of
the Corporations Act, such as a Product Disclosure Statement, will not apply.
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The trustees of superannuation funds, approved deposit
funds, pooled superannuation trusts or public sector superannuation schemes
with net assets of at least $10 million are no longer treated as retail
clients for the purpose of the product disclosure and related provisions when
acquiring an interest in a pooled superannuation trust.
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The provision of an interest in a pooled superannuation
trust to the trustee of a superannuation fund, an approved deposit fund, a
pooled superannuation trust or a public sector superannuation scheme with net
assets of at least $10 million triggers the investor protections of Part 7.9.
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Registered managed investment schemes investing in unregistered managed
investment schemes
1.1 The
amendments omit the prohibition on registered managed investment schemes
investing in unregistered managed investment schemes.
1.2 It is not
confined to schemes operating predominantly outside Australia. It is
considered appropriate to extend it to Australian unregistered schemes in the
light of the existing ASIC Class Order relief, the duties on responsible
entities of registered managed investment schemes and ASIC’s existing powers in
relation to bodies which operate such schemes.
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Registered managed
investment schemes are allowed to invest in unregistered managed investment
schemes.
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Registered managed
investment schemes are prohibited from investing in unregistered managed
investment schemes.
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Detailed explanation of new law
Exemption from providing a Statement of Advice — no product recommendation
and no remuneration
1.1 The
providing entity does not have to provide a Statement of Advice to the client,
when providing personal advice that meets the two following requirements
(subsection 946B(7)).
1.2 The
personal advice does not recommend or state an opinion in respect of the
acquisition or disposal of a specific financial product; and the following
persons do not receive any remuneration directly or any other benefit for
providing the advice:
·
the providing entity;
·
an employer of the providing entity;
·
the authorising licensee, or any of the authorising licensees;
·
an employee or director of the authorising licensee;
·
an associate of any of the above.
1.3 The
providing entity must record the advice in a Record of Advice and comply with
requirements regarding Records of Advice, including the requirement to include
information about remuneration or other benefits and other interests and
associations (subsections 946B(8) and (9)). [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 118]
Threshold for requiring a Statement of Advice
1.4 A
providing entity does not have to provide the client with a Statement of
Advice, when providing personal advice in relation to financial investments of
a threshold amount that does not exceed an amount prescribed by regulations
(section 946AA).
1.5 The
exemption does not apply to advice in relation to a derivative, a general
insurance product or a life risk insurance product (except where the advice
about a superannuation product relates to a life risk insurance product). In
addition, it does not apply to a superannuation product or a retirement savings
account product unless the client already has an interest in the product.
1.6 The
amendment provides the principles for determining the total value of the
investments to which the advice relates and provides a mechanism for
determining the value in relation to particular kinds of financial products.
1.7 Instead
of providing the client with a Statement of Advice, the providing entity must
keep a record of the personal advice and comply with all requirements that
currently apply in regard to the content of Records of Advice, including the
requirement to include information about remuneration or other benefits and
other interests and associations (as required in paragraphs 947B(2)(d) and (e)
or 947C(2)(e) and (f)).
1.8 The
providing entity must give the client a copy of the Record of Advice as soon as
practicable and prior to the provision of any further financial service to the
client. [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 117]
Financial Services Guide exemption – general advice to the public
1.9 An entity
which provides general advice to clients does not have to give a Financial
Services Guide to those clients if the general advice is provided to the
public, or a section of the public in the manner prescribed in the regulations [Schedule 1, Part 3,
item 219].
1.10 Currently,
this exemption only applies to public forums.
1.11 By virtue
of the regulations, the exemption is expected to apply to sections of the
public such as seminars to groups of employees, as well as broadcasts and
promotional material available to the public (to which the current exemption
applies).
Sophisticated investors
1.12 The
amendment inserts a mechanism whereby a financial services licensee can certify
that a client has sufficient experience to be treated as wholesale. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 100, section 761GA]
1.13 The
licensee needs to be satisfied on reasonable grounds that the previous
experience allows the client to assess such matters as the merits and value of
the financial product or service, and the risks associated with holding the
product. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 100, paragraphs 761GA(a) and (d)]
1.14 The
licensee must provide the client with a written statement of the reasons for
being satisfied about these matters and the client needs to sign an
acknowledgement of the consequences of being treated as wholesale. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 100, paragraphs 761GA(e) and
(f)]
1.15 The
mechanism does not apply to general insurance products, superannuation products
or retirement savings account products, or where the product is provided for
use in connection with a business. Â [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 100, paragraphs 761GA(b) and (c)]
Cross-endorsement of authorised representatives
1.16 The
effect of section 917C on two or more financial services licensees
cross-endorsing a particular authorised representative is refined where the
licensees have authorised the representative in relation to different kinds or
sub-classes of financial products.
1.17 The
kinds of financial product to which this amendment applies will be prescribed
by regulations. Â [Schedule 1, Part 3,
item 218]
1.18 The
regulations are expected to specify the kinds or sub-classes of general
insurance to which this provision applies. If appropriate, the regulations
could extend this cross-endorsement provision beyond general insurance.
Product activity and data collection
1.19 The
person responsible for the Product Disclosure Statement must lodge a notice
with ASIC, as soon as possible or at least within 5 business days of any
of the following events:
·
The Product Disclosure Statement is first given to someone in a recommendation,
issue or sale situation;
·
A change is made to the fees and charges in the Product
Disclosure Statement;
·
The financial product to which the Product Disclosure
Statement relates is no longer recommended or offered to new clients in a recommendation,
issue or sale situation.[Schedule 1, Part 4, item 223]
1.20 The
notice will be able to be lodged electronically with ASIC from 1 July 2008 and
will be required to be lodged electronically from 1 January 2009. [Schedule 1, Part 5,
items 224, 225 and 226]
Licensed market operators and related listed bodies
1.21 Section
798C pertaining to self-listing markets is replaced with a new section
extending its application to a wider variety of potential conflict situations.Â
[Schedule 1,
Part 1, item 101]
1.22 The
current law addresses conflicts of interest where a market licensee is
self-listed.
1.23 To ensure
that adequate supervisory functions are also in place for listed bodies which
are related to the market licensee, subsection 798C(1) provides for the market
licensee, a related body corporate of the market licensee, a managed investment
scheme whose responsible entity is a related body corporate of the market
licensee or a trust whose trustee is a related body corporate of the market
licensee to be included in the market’s official list only if certain
arrangements are entered into with ASIC. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 101]
1.24 The
arrangements which either the market licensee or the listed entity or both are
required to enter into will address the potential conflict of interest which
could arise and matters required for the purpose of ensuring the integrity of
trading in the listed entity’s financial products. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 101, subsection 798C(2)]
1.25 In
addition, while the listed entity is included in the market’s official list,
the listing rules of the market must provide for ASIC to make decisions and to
take action in relation to the admission to the official list, the removal from
the official list and the allowing, stopping or suspending of trading on the
market of the listed entity’s financial products.  [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 101, subsection 798C(4)]
1.26 It is an
offence for the listed entity or the market licensee, whichever ASIC entered
into an arrangement with, to fail to comply with an arrangement. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 101, subsection 798C(3)]
1.27 To
ensure that the market is supervised in an adequate manner it is necessary for
ASIC to be able to exempt or modify the provisions of the corporations
legislation. The current law allows for ASIC to exempt or modify the
application of the law to a self-listing market. Items 102, 103 and 104 will
allow ASIC to exempt or modify the application of the corporations legislation
with respect to the market licensee or the listed body. [Schedule 1, Part 1,Â
items 102, 103 and 104, paragraphs 798D(1)(a) and (b), subsections 798D(4) and
(5)]
Licensed market operators and related participants
1.28 At
present the law does not address situations where a market licensee or a body
related to a market licensee may be a participant on its own market.
1.29 In
addition the current law does not address the situation where a participant in
the market is a competitor of, or a participant in a business that is in
competition with, a business conducted by the market licensee or a body
corporate related to the market licensee.
1.30 To
address this issue the Bill enacts a provision to regulate who is to supervise
certain participants in the market. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 105, subsection 798DA]
1.31 Section
798DA will require the market licensee to amend their market operating rules to
provide for ASIC instead of the market licensee to make decisions and take
action in relation to certain participants with regard to the admission,
expulsion, suspending, disciplining of participants and the supervision of
their compliance with the market’s operating rules, the Corporations Act and
the regulations. Â [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 105, subsection 798DA(2)]
1.32 The
section applies to the following participants in a market:
·
the market licensee;
·
a related body corporate of the market licensee;
·
a partnership where a partner is a related entity of the market
licensee; and
·
a competitor or a participant in a business which is in
competition with the market licensee or a related body corporate of the market
licensee, but only where the participant chooses that ASIC will act in place of
the market licensee. Â [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 105, subsection 798DA(1)]
1.33 It
is an offence for a participant to participate in the market except in
accordance with the section. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 105, subsection 798DA(4],
[Schedule 1,
Part 1, item 173]
Pooled superannuation trusts and product disclosure
1.34 A pooled
superannuation trust, approved deposit fund, a pooled superannuation trust or a
public sector superannuation scheme that has net assets of at least $10 million
and which is provided with an interest in a pooled superannuation trust by a
trustee of the trust will be treated as wholesale. It will no longer be
treated as retail in this transaction. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 98, paragraph 761G(6)(aa)]
1.35 The
opportunity has been taken to correct the left hand margin of paragraph
761G(6)(c). [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 99]
Registered managed investment schemes investing in unregistered managed
investment schemes
1.36 The
amendment repeals subsection 601FC(4) which imposes the duty on the responsible
entity of a registered managed investment scheme not to invest scheme property
in unregistered managed investment schemes. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 66]
1.37 Other
duties on the responsible entity (for example, to act in the best interests of
the members) are unchanged.
Application and transitional provisions
Exemption from providing a Statement of Advice — no product recommendation
and no remuneration
1.38 The
amendments will commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
Threshold for requiring a Statement of Advice
1.39 The
amendments will commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
Financial Services Guide exemption – general advice to the public
1.40 The
amendments commence from a day to be fixed by Proclamation. If no date is
fixed within 6 months from the date on which the Act receives Royal Assent,
then the amendment will commence on the first day after that period. [Clause 2]
Sophisticated investors
1.41 The
amendments will commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
1.42 The
amendments apply to financial products and financial services provided on and
after the day the amendments commence. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 238]
Cross-endorsement of authorised representatives
1.43 The
amendments commence from a day to be fixed by Proclamation. If no date is
fixed within 6 months from the date on which the Act receives Royal Assent,
then the amendment will commence on the first day after that period. Â [Clause 2]
1.44 The
amendments apply in relation to the conduct of a representative on or after the
day on which the amendments commence. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 243]
Product activity and data collection
1.45
Amendments providing for the optional use of electronic
lodgement of in use notices will commence on 1 July 2008. Electronic lodgement
will become mandatory on 1 January 2009.  [Clause 2 and Schedule 1, Part 6,
items 245 and 246]
Licensed market operators and related participants and listed bodies
1.46 The
amendments commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
1.47 Item 239
ensures that arrangements already in place under section 798C retain their
validity. Â [Schedule
1, Part 6, item 239]
Pooled superannuation trusts and product disclosure
1.48 The
amendments will commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
1.49 The
amendments apply to financial products and financial services provided on and
after the day the amendments commence. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 238]
Registered managed investment schemes investing in unregistered managed
investment schemes
1.50 The
amendments will commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
Consequential amendments
Exemption from providing a Statement of Advice — no product recommendation
and no remuneration
1.51 Consequential
amendments are made to subsection 940C(3) which sets out how documents,
information and statements are to be given. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 107]
1.52 A Record
of Advice is currently used to document further market advice. This measure
extends the use of the Record of Advice to initial advice in a particular
situation. Consequential amendments omit ‘further market related advice’ and
substitutes various terms and references to describe the initial advice covered
by the new provision as well as the further market related advice. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 108-115]
1.53 A
consequential amendment is made to subsection 946A(3) to acknowledge the
additional situation in which a Statement of Advice is not required. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 116]
1.54 As a
consequence of the use of a Record of Advice, amendments are made clarifying
the definition of defective disclosure statements in relation to offence
penalties and civil liability is expanded to include the record. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 119-126]
1.55 The
maximum penalty is specified for the offence of breaching the requirement to
keep and provide a Record of Advice under the new provisions. This new
provision carries the default rate of 50 penalty units. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 175]
Threshold for requiring a Statement of Advice
1.56 As a
consequence of the use of a Record of Advice when section 946AA is relied on,
amendments are made to subsection 940C(3) which sets out how documents,
information and statements are to be given. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 107]
1.57 A
consequential amendment is made to subsection 946A(3) to acknowledge the
additional situation in which a Statement of Advice is not required. Â [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 116]
1.58 As a
consequence of the use of a Record of Advice, amendments are made clarifying
the definition of defective disclosure statements in relation to offence
penalties and civil liability is expanded to include the record. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 119-126]
1.59 The
maximum penalty is specified for the offence of breaching the requirement to
keep and provide a Record of Advice under the new provisions. This new
provision carries the default penalty of 50 penalty units. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 175]
Financial Services Guide exemption — general advice to the public
1.60 As a
consequence of the amendment to the circumstances in which a provider need not
provide a Financial Services Guide, subsection 941C(4A) which provides that the
regulations may define what constitutes a public forum for the purposes of
subsection 941C(4) is repealed. [Schedule 1, Part 3, items 219 and 220]
Sophisticated investors
1.61 References
to the new section which provides a mechanism by which experienced investors
can be certified as wholesale clients are included in the definition of retail
client in section 761A and in subsection 761G(1). [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 95 and 97]
Cross-endorsement of authorised representatives
1.62 A
consequential amendment is made to section 917A which describes the application
of Division 6 of Part 7.6 of the Corporations Act. [Schedule 1, Part 3,
item 216]
1.63 Consequential
amendments to the references to ‘product’ in paragraphs 917A(3)(c), (d) and (e)
are also made. [Schedule
1, Part 3, item 217]
Supporting bill
Licensed market operators and related participants
1.64 This Bill
requires a market operator’s operating rules to provide for ASIC to supervise
certain participants. This will impose additional responsibilities on ASIC,
resulting in additional expenditure.
1.65 The
Corporations (Fees) Act 2001 will be consequentially amended so ASIC can
impose a fee for the functions conferred on it by the operating rules of a
market as required by subsection 798DA(2). [Schedule 1, item 1, Corporations (Fees) Amendment Bill
2007]
Outline of chapter
2.1 This Bill
contains seven refinements to the existing company reporting obligations in the
Corporations Act that are aimed at reducing compliance costs for companies in
relation to their reporting obligations:
·
amendments to incorporate in the Corporations Act the accounting
standards requirements for executive and director remuneration disclosure;
·
increases in the thresholds used to define a large proprietary
company and allow for future changes to the thresholds to be prescribed by
regulations;
·
amendments to the notification requirements for changes in office
holders and company addresses, payment of annual fees and to the company
deregistration procedure; and
·
amendments to allow companies to make annual reports available on
the internet and only require hard copies to be sent to members who request
them.
2.2 The
amendments simplify company reporting obligations to reduce the regulatory
burden on business, maintain investor protections and reduce compliance costs.
Context of amendments
2.3 The
measures in this Bill are aimed at reducing the burden of red tape to allow
Australian corporations to do business more efficiently.
2.4 Accurate
and prompt information is fundamental to the operation of an efficient market.Â
The disclosure obligations in the Corporations Act are an important regulatory
tool providing the market with relevant information on which interested parties
can make commercial decisions.
2.5 However,
the disclosure requirements should be framed in a way so that they do not
unnecessarily, or excessively, interfere with companies devoting resources to
productive outputs.
2.6 The
refinements to the company reporting obligations will deliver a simpler
regulatory framework that reduces the regulatory burden on business, continues
to protect investors, and reduces compliance costs. The amendments have their
origins in the Rethinking Regulation report of the Taskforce on Reducing
Regulatory Burdens on Business and the Corporate and Financial Services Regulation
Review Proposals Paper of November 2006.
Summary of new law
2.7 The Bill
will make a number of refinements to the company reporting obligations in the
Corporations Act to:
·
establish a disclosure framework that will allow the accounting
standards requirements for executive and director remuneration to be
incorporated into Corporations Act. The Bill also introduces a new disclosure
requirement in relation to executives and directors hedging their incentive
remuneration and several other minor and technical amendments to further refine
the framework;
·
increase the thresholds used to define a large proprietary
company. A proprietary company will be defined as being large if it satisfies
two of the following tests:Â revenue of $25 million; assets of
$12.5 million; and 50 employees. The amendments also allow for future
changes to the thresholds to be prescribed by regulations.
·
remove the requirement for companies to notify ASIC of the
retirement or resignation of office holders where the office holders themselves
have lodged notifications with ASIC;
·
provide for ASIC to use a company’s contact address where that
address is more convenient for the company;
·
remove the requirement to pay an annual review fee where the
annual review date falls two months before or after the Gazette
notice that the company is to be deregistered;
·
allow companies to pay their annual review fees for a period of
10 years by way of a single lump sum payment; and
·
enable companies, registered schemes and disclosing entities to
make annual reports available on a web site and provide hard copies only to
those members who elect to receive them in that form.
Comparison of key features of new law and
current law
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Executive remuneration
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The remuneration disclosure requirements for individual
directors and executives of listed companies are exclusively contained in the
Corporations Act.Â
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The remuneration disclosure requirements for individual
directors and executives of listed companies are contained in both the
accounting standards and the Corporations Act. Listed companies are required
to comply with both sets of requirements.Â
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Companies that are disclosing entities must disclose their
policy in relation to directors and executives hedging their incentive
remuneration and how the company enforces this policy.Â
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No comparative disclosure requirement currently exists.Â
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Thresholds for reporting for large proprietary
companies
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A proprietary
company will be defined as being large if it satisfies two of the following
tests:Â revenue of $25 million; assets of $12.5 million and 50
employees. The amendments also allow for future changes to the
thresholds to be prescribed by regulations.Â
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A proprietary company is defined as being large if it
satisfies two of the following tests:Â revenue of $10 million; assets of
$5 million and 50 employees.Â
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Companies will no longer be obliged to lodge notices of
the cessation of company office holders with ASIC where the office holders
themselves have lodged notifications with ASIC.
|
Companies must lodge with ASIC notice of the cessation of
a company office holder, even where office holders have themselves lodged
notifications with ASIC.
|
|
|
|
|
Notifications — company addresses
|
|
A company may have a contact address. If a company
chooses to have a contact address it must lodge notice of the address with
ASIC in the prescribed form.Â
|
The contact address for a company is not explicitly
recognised in the Corporations Act, giving rise to issues of transparency
when ASIC uses that address for administrative purposes.
|
|
Simplifying voluntary deregistrations
|
|
An annual review fee will not be payable where the review
date for the company falls 2 months before or after the Gazette
notice that the company is to be deregistered.
|
A company must pay its annual review fee even where an
application has been lodged to deregister the company.
|
|
Upfront payment of annual review fees for companies
|
|
A company will have the option of paying annual review
fees for a period of 10 years
by way of a single lump sum payment.
|
A company must pay annual review fees for each review date
upon which it is registered. The company is billed annually for review fees.
|
|
Distribution of annual reports
|
|
Companies, registered schemes and disclosing entities can
make their annual report available on a web site and only send a hard copy to
members that request one. Alternatively, the entity can continue to
distribute hard copy reports, by default, to members.
|
Companies, registered schemes and disclosing entities are
required to send a member a hard copy of the annual report unless a member
does not request a hard copy.
|
|
|
|
Detailed explanation of new law
Executive remuneration
2.1 The
remuneration disclosure requirements for executives and directors of listed
companies are currently contained in both the accounting standards and the
Corporations Act (and the Corporations Regulations). There is considerable
duplication between the requirements in the accounting standards and the
Corporations Act as well as some minor inconsistencies.
2.2 The
objective of the amendments is to consolidate the remuneration disclosure
requirements currently contained in the accounting standards into the
Corporations Act and Corporations Regulations. Following on from the
amendments to the Corporations Act in this Bill, the remaining
remuneration disclosure requirements in the accounting standards will be
incorporated into the Corporations Regulations. This will simplify the
requirements as companies will no longer be required to refer to both the
accounting standards and the Corporations Act to determine their remuneration
disclosure requirements.
2.3 The
amendments also make other minor refinements to the requirements to strengthen
the existing framework.
2.4 The range
of directors and executives whose remuneration must be disclosed under the
accounting standards is determined by whether the individual meets the
definition of ‘key management personnel’. The Corporations Act requires
the remuneration of all directors and the five most highly remunerated
executives from the company and the consolidated group to be disclosed.
2.5 The
amendments ensure that the range of individuals whose remuneration must be
disclosed remains the same after the accounting standard requirements are moved
into the Corporations Act. To achieve this, the amendments require remuneration
disclosures to be made for any individual that falls within the definition of
‘key management personnel’, in addition to the existing directors and
executives required to be disclosed under section 300A of the Corporations
Act. [Schedule
1, Part 1, items 24 to 27, 31 and 32]
2.6 The term
key management personnel for the purposes of the Corporations Act will
be defined in the accounting standards. This is to ensure consistency between
the Corporations Act and the accounting standards. If a definition was
included in the Corporations Act, the definition would need to be amended
whenever changes were made to the accounting standards. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, item 32]
2.7 One of
the consequences of moving the remuneration disclosure requirements out of the
accounting standards and into the Corporations Act is that the
disclosures will be made in a company’s directors’ report instead of the
financial report. The amendments introduce a requirement for a company’s
auditor to express an opinion on the remuneration information that has been
moved from the audited financial reports into the directors’ report. This
ensures that the remuneration disclosures continue to be subject to assurance
by an external auditor. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 36]
2.8 The
amendments impose a strict liability offence in relation to the audit of the
information in the directors’ report. This is consistent with the liability
imposed on auditors in relation to auditing the company’s financial report.Â
The overall scope of the auditor’s exposure to criminal liability has not
changed as a result of these amendments. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 37 and item 168]
2.9 The
amendments also modify the scope of the remuneration disclosure requirements
from listed companies to disclosing entities that are companies. This is
necessary to bring the application of the Corporations Act disclosures
into line with the application of the accounting standards disclosures. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 33]
2.10 The
amendments also make a number of minor refinements to strengthen the disclosure
framework. The amendments require companies to disclose board policy in
relation to directors and executives hedging their incentive remuneration and
the mechanism that the company uses to enforce this policy [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 28]. This will ensure that shareholders are informed about
the company’s policy on this issue.
2.11 In
addition, the amendments clarify the disclosure requirement in section
300A(1)(e)(iv) to ensure that the policy intention of the requirement is
achieved [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 29], and remove the requirement under
subparagraph 300A(1)(e)(v) for companies to disclose the aggregate of options
granted, exercised and that have lapsed during the year on the ground that is
not being used by shareholders [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 30].
Thresholds for reporting for large proprietary companies
2.12 Large
proprietary companies are required to prepare a financial report and a
directors’ report for each financial year under subsection 292(1) of the
Corporations Act.
2.13 Under the
current requirements (subsection 45A(3) of the Corporations Act), a proprietary
company is defined as a large proprietary company for a financial year if it
satisfies at least two of the following tests:
·
the consolidated gross operating revenue for the financial year
of the company and the entities it controls is $10 million or more;
·
the value of the consolidated gross assets for the financial year
of the company and the entities it controls is $5 million or more; and
·
the company and the entities it controls have 50 or more
employees at the end of the financial year.Â
2.14 These
thresholds have not been reviewed since their introduction in 1995. As a
result, the current monetary thresholds are set at too low a level to determine
economic significance and have led to an increasing number of non-economically
significant entities being subject to the reporting requirements.
2.15 In order
to reduce the regulatory burden on non-economically significant proprietary
companies and ensure that users still receive the financial information of
economically significant proprietary companies, the monetary thresholds will be
increased by 150 per cent. The employee thresholds will remain
unchanged at 50 employees.
2.16 Under the
new arrangements, a proprietary company will be defined as a large proprietary
company for a financial year if it satisfies at least two of the following
tests:
·
the consolidated operating revenue for the financial year of the
company and the entities it controls is $25 million or more;
·
the value of the consolidated gross assets for the financial year
of the company and the entities it controls is $12.5 million or more; and
·
the company and the entities it controls have 50 or more
employees at the end of the financial year.
[Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 16 to 18]
2.17 A
corresponding increase in the revenue and asset thresholds used to define a
small proprietary company under subsection 45A(2) will mirror the changes in
the thresholds of large proprietary companies. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 12 to 14]
2.18 A
mechanism will also be included to regularly assess the thresholds through the
Corporations Regulations to ensure that the thresholds continue to accurately
reflect genuine economic significance during periods of long and sustained
economic growth. The amendments will enable changes to the thresholds to be
prescribed by regulation. [Schedule 1, Part 1, items 12 to 14 and 16 to 18]
2.19 Currently,
section 45A of the Corporations Act uses the term ‘consolidated gross operating
revenue’ to guide entities when calculating the group’s total revenue to
determine whether they meet the threshold tests. The accounting standards no
longer refer to this term. Consequentially, this term will be replaced with
‘consolidated operating revenue’ to reflect changes to the accounting
standards. [Schedule
1, Part 1, items 11, 15 and 19]
2.20 The Bill
will amend the Corporations Act to remove the requirement for companies to
inform ASIC when office holders have resigned or retired where the office
holders themselves have informed ASIC. The amendment is intended to reduce
the compliance burden on companies in the sense that the current arrangements
require companies to provide ASIC with information that ASIC may already have.
2.21 Currently,
section 205A of the Corporations Act allows a ceasing office holder
to notify ASIC that they no longer hold office, while section 205B requires
a company to notify ASIC of any change in its office holders. The corporate
register is updated by ASIC once it receives notification that a company office
holder has resigned, regardless of whether it is the ceasing office holder or
the company itself that has notified ASIC.
2.22 The Bill
amends section 205B of the Corporations Act so that a company is no longer
obliged to notify ASIC of the cessation of an officeholder where ASIC has
already been notified by the departing office holder under section 205A. [Schedule 1,
Part 3, items 204 and 205]
2.23 The Bill
will also introduce a new exception to the current offence of a company failing
to notify ASIC in section 205B of the Corporations Act. A company will
not be liable for an offence where the departing officeholder gives ASIC a
written notice of the person’s retirement or resignation as an office holder of
the company under section 205A.
2.24 This
exception is aligned with the existing exception for alternate directors
currently found in subsection 205B(6). Like the existing exemption, the
evidentiary burden of proof is reversed, that is, it is placed on the defendant
(the company) and not the prosecution. The reversal has been maintained for
consistency with the current exception and to facilitate efficient business
compliance and regulatory outcomes. [Schedule 1, Part 3, item 206]
2.25 The Bill
also amends the Small Business Guide in Part 1.5 of the Corporations Act to
make reference to the new arrangements. [Schedule 1, Part 3, items 198, 199 and
200]
Notifications — company addresses
2.26 The Bill
will amend the Corporations Act to provide for a company notifying ASIC of a
contact address. This will allow companies to nominate an address, separate
from the registered office address, at which they prefer to receive documents
from ASIC. Under existing arrangements, ASIC allows companies to provide it
with a contact address, but that address is not recognised in the
Corporations Act. Recognition of the contact address in the Corporations
Act will provide greater transparency, as the contact address will be included
on the register maintained by ASIC. After commencement of the new provisions,
the contact address will be able to be updated on the same form as other
company details.
2.27
The Bill inserts a new subsection 146A(1) into the
Corporations Act to provide that a company may have a contact address and ASIC
may send communications and notices to the company’s contact address. The Bill
also inserts a new subsection 146A(2) into the Corporations Act to provide
that a company must lodge a change to its contact address in the prescribed
form. [Schedule 1,
Part 3, item 203]
2.28
The Bill also inserts a note at the end of subsection
142(1) of the Corporations Act to alert the reader to the fact that ASIC may
send communications and notices to the company’s contact address. [Schedule 1, Part
3, items 201 and 202]
Simplifying voluntary deregistration
2.29 A person
(including the company) may apply to ASIC under section 601AA of the
Corporations Act to deregister the company if, among other things, the company
has paid all fees and penalties payable under the Corporations Act and has no
outstanding liabilities.
2.30 Currently,
companies that have applied for voluntary deregistration are still subject to
annual review obligations (including the requirement to pay the annual review
fee) up until the point of deregistration. This means that annual review fees
may be incurred or become payable in the two-month period between approval of
the deregistration application and the actual deregistration of the company.Â
Annual review fees may also be payable in the period from application for deregistration
to the time when ASIC has given notice of the proposed deregistration.
2.31
The Bill amends section 1351 of the Corporations Act to
provide that review fees are not payable under the Corporations (Review
Fees) Act 2003 if ASIC has given notice of the proposed deregistration of
the company and the review date for that year falls two months before or
after the publication of the notice. The amendment is intended to remove the
obligation to pay annual review fees where a decision is made to deregister a
company in close temporal proximity to an annual review date. [Schedule 1, Part 3,
item 221]
Upfront payment of annual review fees for companies
2.32 The
existing Corporations (Review Fees) Act 2003, in conjunction with the Corporations
(Review Fees) Regulations 2003, requires an annual payment to ASIC of $212
by a proprietary company, $1000 by a public company or a registered scheme and
$40 by a special purpose company. Transaction
costs could be reduced by allowing for less frequent payment.
2.33 The Bill
amends section 1351 of the Corporations Act to provide for a company making
payment for a review date other than the current review date. Â [Schedule 1, Part 3,
item 221]
2.34 The
amendment to the Corporations Act allows regulations to be made under the Corporations
(Review Fees) Act 2003 to provide for a payment of annual review fees for
an extended period by way of a single lump sum payment.
Distribution of annual reports
2.35 Companies,
registered schemes and disclosing entities are required to report to members
either by:
·
using a web site as the default method of distributing the
reports, in accordance with subclause 314(1AA); or
·
by sending hard copies as the default method of distributing the
reports, in accordance with subclause 314(1AE). [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 38]
2.36 It is not
mandatory for entities to use a web site as the default method of distributing
the reports. An entity can continue to send a hard copy of the reports as the
default method of distribution if it so chooses [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 38].
2.37 Subclauses
314(1AA) to (1AD) apply if a company, registered scheme or disclosing entity
uses a web site as the default method of distributing the reports.
2.38 A
company, registered scheme or disclosing entity that reports in accordance with
subclause 314(1AA) must:
·
send a hard copy of the reports to those members who have made an
election under paragraph 314(1AB)(a) to receive a hard copy under subparagraph
314(1AA)(a)(i) [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 38]. Alternatively, the entity can send an
electronic copy (such as a copy provided by e-mail or fax) of the reports where
the entity offers to send the reports as an electronic copy and the member
elects to receive an electronic copy under paragraph 314(1AB)(c) [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 38];
·
make a copy of the reports readily accessible on a web site under
paragraph 314(1AA)(b) [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 38]. Placing a copy of the
reports on a restricted area of a web site, for example, would not satisfy this
requirement; and
·
under paragraph 314(1AA)(c) directly notify those members who did
not receive a hard copy that the reports are accessible on the web site, and
specify the direct address of the web site [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 38]. The
direct address may be specified, for example, by providing the Uniform Resource
Locator (URL) of the reports. The direct address is intended to enable the
member to directly access the reports on the web site. This notification can
be made in hard copy, or by electronic means (for example, e-mail or fax) in
accordance with subclause 314(1AD) [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 38]. In
addition, this notification could be included with other correspondence sent to
members, for example, with the notice of the annual general meeting. This
notification must also be sent directly to the member. A company announcement
on the Australian Securities Exchange, for example, would not satisfy this
requirement.
2.39 A
company, registered scheme or disclosing entity that reports in accordance with
subclause 314(1AA), must satisfy the requirements of that subclause by the
deadline set out in section 315 of the Act. A company, registered scheme or
disclosing entity that uses subclause 314(1AA) is taken to report at the
time the company, registered scheme or disclosing entity has fully complied
with the requirements of that subclause. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 41]
2.40 A
company, registered scheme or disclosing entity that reports in accordance with
subclause 314(1AA) must directly notify each member that:
·
under paragraph 314(1AB)(a) the member has a right to elect
to receive a hard copy of the reports free of charge [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 38];
·
if the member does not elect to receive a hard copy, the member
may access the reports on a specified web site under paragraph 314(1AB)(b) [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 38]; and
·
under paragraph 314(1AB)(c) the member can elect to receive the
reports as a hard copy or an electronic copy (such as e-mail or fax) — if the
entity offers its members an additional option to receive an electronic copy of
the reports [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 38].
2.41 The
notification required by subclause 314(1AB) only needs to be sent to each
member once. This one-off notification is intended to inform members of this
amendment and the effect it will have on the default method of distributing
reports. The notification is also intended to provide entities with an
opportunity to collect members’ preferences for distributing the reports.
2.42 Under
subclause 314(1AC), the member’s election to receive a copy of the reports
under subclause 314(1AB) is a standing election for each subsequent financial
year until the member changes his or her election [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 38]. The standing election ensures that members do not have
to repeat their request for a hard copy each year. The existing law continues
to allow members to change their election at any time using subsection 316(1).
2.43 The
notification required by subclause 314(1AB) must be made to all members after
the Act commences [Schedule
1, Part 6, item 233(2)]. Notifications made in the past will not
satisfy this requirement. However, an exception to this requirement provides
that a company, registered scheme or disclosing entity is not required to
provide the notification under subclause 314(1AB) to those members who have
already notified the entity, under paragraph 316(1)(a), that they do not wish
to receive the reports [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 233(3)].
2.44 For an
existing member, the notification required by subclause 314(1AB) can be made in
hard copy, or by electronic means (for example, e-mail or fax) in accordance
with subclause 314(1AD) [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 38]. For
a new member, this notification could be sent, for example, as part of their
initial registration pack.
2.45 Subclause
314(1AE) applies if a company, registered scheme or disclosing entity sends a
hard copy of the reports as the default method of distribution to members.Â
This maintains the status quo by allowing companies, registered schemes and
disclosing entities to continue to provide, by default, a hard copy of the
reports to members.
Application and transitional provisions
2.46 The
amendments will apply to financial years that begin on or after the
commencement of the legislation. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 232]
Thresholds for reporting for large proprietary companies
2.47 The
amendments will take effect in the financial year that ends on or after the day
on which those items commence. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 231]
Notifications — change in office holders
2.48 The
amendments to remove the requirement for companies to inform ASIC when office
holders have resigned or retired where the office holders themselves have
informed ASIC will commence on a date to be proclaimed, or if no date is
proclaimed, six months after Royal Assent.
Notifications — company addressesÂ
2.49 The
amendments to provide for a company using a contact address will commence on a
date to be proclaimed, or if no date is proclaimed, six months after Royal
Assent.
Simplifying voluntary deregistration
2.50 The
amendments to remove the obligation to pay annual review fees two months before
or after ASIC giving notice of a proposed deregistration of a company will
apply to a review date that occurs on or after the day on which that item
commences. The item will commence on a date to be proclaimed, or if no date is
proclaimed, six months after Royal Assent. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 244]
Upfront payment of annual review fees for companies
2.51 The
amendments to provide for regulations being made to allow a single lump sum
payment of annual review fees to cover an extended period will commence on a
date to be proclaimed, or if no date is proclaimed, six months after Royal
Assent.
Distribution of annual reports
2.52 The
amendments apply to reports for a financial year that ends on or after the day
on which those items commence. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 233(1)]
2.53 Companies,
registered schemes and disclosing entities will be required to provide the
notification under subclause 314(1AB) after that subclause commences [Schedule 1, Part 6,
item 233(2)]. However, an exception to this notification
requirement exists where a member has already notified the entity under
paragraph 316(1)(a) that the member does not wish to receive the reports [Schedule 1, Part 6,
item 233(3)].
Consequential amendments
Thresholds for reporting for large proprietary companies
2.54 A
number of consequential amendments will need to replace the thresholds used to
define a designated private company in the Social Security Act 1991
and the Veterans’ Entitlement Act 1986. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, items 176 to 179 and items 182 to 185]
2.55 In
addition, the term consolidated gross operating revenue will be replaced with
consolidated operating revenue in the Social Security Act 1991
and the Veterans’ Entitlement Act 1986. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, items 180 and 181, and items 186 and 187]
Notifications – change in office holders
2.56 Section
222AOF of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936) allows the
Commissioner of Taxation to rely on certain documents lodged with ASIC to
indicate the address to which a penalty notice under section 222AOE of the
ITAA 1936 may be sent to a current or former director.
2.57 Currently,
the documents referred to are those lodged pursuant to sections 205B and 345 of
the Corporations Act.
2.58 As a
consequence of the notification of change in office holder amendments,
companies may no longer have to lodge documents under section 205B where
the office holder has lodged a document under section 205A.
2.59
The Bill will amend section 222AOF of the ITAA 1936
to refer to documents lodged with ASIC under both sections 205A and 205B of the
Corporations Act. The Bill also corrects the incorrect reference to
section 345 of the Corporations Act, with the correct reference to
section 346C. Â [Schedule 1, Part 3, item 222]
Distribution of annual reports
2.60 The Bill
repeals provisions relating to the use of electronic means to send reports to
members under subsections 314(4), (5) and (6), as the ability to use electronic
means has been incorporated into item 38 of Schedule 1. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 40]
2.61 Subsection
314(1A) currently establishes a strict liability offence in relation to
breaches of subsection 314(1). The Bill makes a consequential amendment to
subsection 314(1A) to provide that a breach of subclause 314(1AB) is also a
strict liability offence [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 39]. The
notification provided under subclause 314(1AB) is required by paragraph
314(1AA)(a). The strict liability offence in subsection 314(1A) indirectly
covers a breach of paragraph 314(1AA)(a), but does not cover a breach of
subclause 314(1AB). Therefore, to ensure paragraph 314(1AA)(a) operates
effectively, subclause 314(1AB) has been amended to provide a consistent
criminal liability provision [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 169].
2.62 The
Bill amends paragraph 318(2)(a) and subsection 319(1) to replace a reference to
‘sent’ with a reference to ‘provided’. [Schedule 1, Part 1, items 42 and 43]
Supporting Bill
Upfront payment of annual review fees for companies
2.63
The Corporations (Review Fees) Amendment Bill 2007 (the
Review Fees Bill) will amend the Corporations (Review Fees) Act 2003
(the Review Fees Act) to insert a note after subsection 5(1) to alert the
reader to the fact that the Corporations (Review Fees) Regulations 2003 may
prescribe a fee to be paid upfront to cover review fees for a future year. [Schedule 1, item 1, Corporations (Review Fees) Amendment
Bill 2007]
2.64 The
Review Fees Bill will amend section 8 of the Review Fees Act to provide for
regulations to be made under the Review Fees Act for the purposes of both
section 1351 of the Corporations Act and for the purposes of the Review Fees
Act. [Schedule 1,
item 2, Corporations (Review Fees) Amendment Bill 2007]
Please do not delete the following section break
Outline of chapter
3.1 This
chapter outlines a number of refinements to the existing auditor independence
requirements in the Corporations Act:
·
amendments relating to Proposal 3.1 of the Corporate and
Financial Services Regulation Review Proposals Paper which proposed that
remedial amendments contained in the Corporations Regulations and two ASIC
class orders relating to the auditor’s independence declaration should be
included in the Corporations Act;
·
improvements arising out of public consultation on the
comparative review of Australia’s auditor independence requirements; and
·
a number of miscellaneous technical amendments designed to
improve the operation of the existing auditor independence requirements.
Anomalies arising from CLERP 9
3.2 The Corporate
Law Economic Reform Program (Audit Reform and Corporate Disclosure) Act 2004
(the CLERP 9 Act) established a comprehensive regime on auditor independence,
implementing recommendations of the review on Independence of Australian
Company Auditors (the Ramsay report) and some of the relevant
recommendations of the report of the HIH Royal Commission.
3.3 The
legislative framework of the auditor independence requirements in the CLERP 9
Act includes:
·
a general requirement for auditor independence;
·
specific auditor independence requirements which contain
restrictions on an extensive range of specific employment and financial
relationships between an auditor, and other persons connected to the auditor,
and the audit client. The Ramsay report described these specific restrictions
as involving ‘core circumstances which, if they exist, necessarily mean that the
auditor is not independent’; and
·
a number of additional requirements relating to other auditor
independence issues, including the auditor’s independence declaration.
3.4 A number
of anomalies and unintended consequences were identified during the implementation
of the CLERP 9 auditor independence requirements which required remedial
action.
3.5 Three of
these issues were addressed by amendments to the Corporations Regulations made
in accordance with section 343 of the Corporations Act. The two remaining
anomalies, which related to the auditor’s independence declaration, were
addressed by ASIC class orders.
3.6 In the
context of the Government’s consultation process to simplify the regulatory
system, it was considered that the inclusion of auditor independence
requirements in the Corporations Act, the Regulations and in ASIC class orders
had the potential to create unnecessary complexity. Proposal 3.1 of the
Corporate and Financial Services Regulation Review Proposals Paper (November
2006) recommended that these amendments to the Corporations Regulations and the
matters dealt with in the two ASIC class orders should be incorporated into the
Corporations Act.
Improvements arising out of public consultations on the comparative review
of Australia’s auditor independence requirements
3.7 The
Government released a discussion paper Australian Auditor Independence
Requirements:Â A Comparative Review (the comparative review) on 15 November
2006. The overall conclusion of the comparative review is that, despite
differences in terminology, institutional arrangements and legal frameworks,
there is a substantial underlying equivalence between the Australian
requirements and international best practice standards.
3.8 When the
comparative review was released, it was noted that several of the key findings
are directly relevant to the Government’s commitment to simplifying the
regulatory system and reducing unnecessary or excessive red tape. The
Government indicated that there may be scope, in line with overseas
developments, to refine the existing auditor independence requirements without
changing or weakening the existing robust regulatory framework. The Government
said that it would consult with key stakeholders to identify whether any such
measures could be included in the proposed Simpler Regulatory System Bill.
3.9 Treasury
has undertaken a targeted consultation process on the review with the key
stakeholders:Â ASIC, the Financial Reporting Council, the major audit firms and
the professional accounting bodies.
3.10 All the
stakeholders have agreed that refinements could be made in three areas of the
auditor independence requirements in the Corporations Act:
·
the multiple former audit firm partner restriction;
·
the former audit partner ‘cooling‑off’ restriction; and
·
the adoption of a ‘covered person’ approach in relation to the
existing financial relationship restrictions.
Miscellaneous amendments
3.11 This
group of technical amendments is designed to improve the effectiveness of the
auditor independence requirements in the light of operational experience since
the requirements were introduced by the CLERP 9 Act in 2004.
Summary of new law
Anomalies arising from CLERP 9
3.12 The
measures will ensure that remedial action taken by amendment of the
Corporations Regulations and by ASIC class orders to address anomalies in the
auditor independence requirements introduced by the CLERP 9 Act will be
incorporated in the Corporations Act.
Improvements arising out of public consultations on the comparative review
of Australia’s auditor independence requirements
3.13 There are
three key measures:
·
the restriction applying to multiple former partners of an audit
firm or former directors of an audit company will no longer apply to a former
partner or former director who has ceased to be a member of the firm or the
audit company for five or more years;
·
the way in which the existing two-year ‘cooling off’ period applying
to a former audit partner of a firm, a former director of an audit company or a
former lead or review auditor in an audit company is calculated, will be
modified; and
·
the existing specific restrictions on financial investments
applying to partners in a firm or directors in an audit company who are not
involved in an audit and not in a position to influence the outcome of an audit
will be removed.
Miscellaneous amendments
3.14 These
amendments will improve the operational efficiency of the auditor independence
requirements by addressing a number of anomalies and minor technical issues.
Comparison of key features of new law and
current law
|
|
|
|
The auditor independence declaration will be able to be
given to the directors before the auditor’s report is signed provided
specified conditions are satisfied.
|
ASIC class
order grants relief from requirement that the auditor’s independence
declaration must be given to the directors at the same time as the auditor’s
report.
|
|
An auditor will no longer be required to report
inadvertent breaches of the auditor independence requirements in the
auditor’s independence declaration provided the statutory defence applies.
|
ASIC Class
order grants relief from requirement that inadvertent breaches of the auditor
independence requirements be included in the independence declaration
provided the statutory defence applies.
|
|
|
|
The ordinary course of business
exception included in the Corporations Regulations will be replicated in the
Corporations Act.
|
The Corporations Regulations modified the operation of the auditor
independence restriction in relation to debts owing by including an ordinary
course of business exception.
|
|
The
exception relating to cheques and savings accounts has been replicated in the
Corporations Act.
|
The
Corporations Regulations modified the operation of the auditor independence
requirements to allow members of an audit team to hold cheque and savings
accounts on call with an audit client bank provided this was done in the
ordinary course of the bank’s business and under normal terms and conditions.
|
|
ASIC will
be given the power in the Corporations Act to extend the period within which
an auditor is required to resolve a conflict of interest situation.
|
The
Corporations Regulations modified the operation of the auditor independence
requirements to give ASIC the power to extend the period within which an
auditor is required to resolve a conflict of interest situation.
|
|
The
restriction will no longer apply to a former partner or former audit company
director who has left the firm or audit company five or more years ago.
|
The
restriction on multiple former audit firm partners and former audit company
directors applies to all former partners and all former audit company
directors.
|
|
The
two-year ‘cooling‑off’ period will be calculated from the date of the
last audit in which the former partner or director participated.
|
The
two-year ‘cooling‑off’ period is calculated from the date of departure
from the firm or audit company.
|
|
The
restrictions on financial investments will not apply to partners who are not
involved in an audit and not in a position to influence the outcome of the
audit.
|
The
specific restrictions on financial investments apply to all partners in an
audit firm.
|
|
ASIC’s
relief powers will be extended to cover members of an audit firm who are not
registered company auditors, former members of an audit firm, former
directors of an audit company and former professional employees of an audit
company.
|
ASIC has
limited powers to exempt registered company auditors from the auditor
independence provisions in the Corporations Act.
|
Detailed explanation of new law
Anomalies arising from CLERP 9
Timing of auditor’s independence declaration
3.1 The CLERP
9 Act introduced a new requirement in section 307C of the Corporations Act
that an auditor provide a declaration as to whether the auditor is aware of any
contraventions of the auditor independence requirements of the Act or of any
applicable codes of professional conduct.
3.2 Subsections
298(1) and 306(2) of the Corporations Act require the auditor’s independence
declaration to be included in the directors’ report. Subsection 307C(5)
requires the auditor to give the independence declaration to the directors with
the auditor’s report. This means that the auditor’s report would need to be
signed before the directors’ report.
3.3 However,
the auditing standards, which have the force of law under the Corporations Act,
require the auditor to comment in the auditor’s report on any material
inconsistencies between the director’s report and the financial report, and to
consider the impact of any material misstatements of fact in the directors’
report.
3.4 ASIC
class order 05/83 granted relief by allowing the auditor’s independence
declaration to be signed before the directors’ report had been signed and the
auditor’s report to be signed after the directors’ report had been signed.
3.5 The
measures in the Bill will address this timing inconsistency by amending
paragraph 307C(5)(a) and inserting subsection 307C(5A). [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 34 and 35]
3.6 Paragraph
307C(5)(a) will provide that the declaration must either be given when the
audit report is given to the directors of the company, registered scheme or
disclosing entity or must satisfy the conditions in subsection 307C(5A).
3.7 Subsection
307C(5A) will provide that a declaration will satisfy the conditions in this
subsection if:
·
the auditor’s independence declaration is given to the directors
and the directors sign the report within 7 days after the declaration is given
to the directors;
·
the auditor’s report on the financial report is made within
7 days after the directors’ report is signed; and
·
the auditor’s report includes a statement to the effect that
either the declaration would be in the same terms if it had been given to the
directors at the time the auditor’s report was made, or circumstances have
changed since the declaration was given to the directors, and setting out how
the declaration would differ if it had been given to the directors at the time
the auditor’s report was made.
Auditor’s independence declaration — reporting of inadvertent breaches
3.8 The CLERP
9 Act introduced a new requirement in section 307C of the Corporations Act that
an auditor provide a declaration as to whether the auditor is aware of any
contraventions of the auditor independence requirements of the Act or of any
applicable codes of professional conduct.
3.9 The
reporting obligations under subsections 307C(1) and 307C(3) require the
declaration to include inadvertent breaches of the auditor independence
requirements under subsections 324CE(2), 324CF(2) or 324CG(2) notwithstanding
that the statutory defence in subsections 324CE(4), 324CF(4) or 324CG(4)
applied to the defendant.
3.10 In the
course of day-to-day audit practice, there would be many examples of
inadvertent breaches of the auditor independence requirements which would be
quickly addressed once the auditor became aware of the breach.
3.11 For
purposes of the specific auditor independence requirements contained in
sections 324CE, 324CF and 324CG of the Corporations Act, the policy intention
is that for purposes of the reporting obligation in relation to an auditor’s
independence declaration, only contraventions under subsections 324CE(1),
324CF(1) or 324CG(1) should be included in the declaration because these
contraventions relate to an intentional breach of the requirements where there
is both knowledge and a failure to take reasonable steps, as soon as possible,
to address the breach.
3.12 ASIC
class order 05/910 exempted an auditor from making a declaration if there are
any contraventions under subsections 324CE(2), 324CF(2) or 324CG(2) of the
Corporations Act provided the statutory defence applied that is, the auditor
had reasonable grounds to believe that it had in place, at the time of the
contravention, a quality control system that provided reasonable assurance that
the auditor would comply with the auditor independence requirements.
3.13 The
measures in the Bill will ensure that an auditor will not be required to report
inadvertent breaches of the auditor independence requirements in the auditor’s
declaration where the statutory defence would be applicable. Subsection
307C(5B) will provide that an individual auditor or a lead auditor is not
required to give a declaration in respect of a contravention if the
contravention was a contravention by a person of subsection 324CE(2), 324CF(2)
or 324CG(2) and the person does not commit an offence because of subsection
324CE(4), 324CF(4) or 324CG(4). [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 35]
Money owed — debt: ordinary course of business exception
3.14 Item 15
of the table in subsection 324CH(1) of the Corporations Act prohibits an
individual auditor, an audit firm or an audit company (and various other
persons specified in the tables in subsections 324CE(5), 324CF(5) and 324CG(9)
from owing an amount of more than $5000 to:
·
the audited body; or
·
a related body corporate; or
·
an entity that the audited body controls.
3.15 This
restriction existed in the auditor independence requirements in the
Corporations Act which pre-dated the CLERP 9 Act. This restriction was
included in the CLERP 9 Act auditor independence requirements in accordance
with a recommendation in the Ramsay report.
3.16 Notwithstanding
that this restriction had been included in the corporations legislation for
over 30 years, during the implementation of the CLERP 9 auditor independence
requirements, concerns were raised by the accounting profession that this
restriction was catching ‘ordinary course of business’ transactions between an
auditor and an audit client. An example is where an audit firm that audited an
airline, would not be able to fly with that airline unless it paid cash rather
than operating an account with the airline on normal credit terms.
3.17 The
Government accepted that as a general rule, debts incurred in the ordinary course
of business and on normal terms and conditions would not constitute a threat to
auditor independence.
3.18 Regulation
2M.6.05 of the Corporations Regulations (which was included in the Corporations
Amendment Regulations 2006 (No. 4)) modified the operation of the auditor
independence requirements by inserting a new ordinary course of business
exception in paragraph 324CH(5)(b).
3.19 Paragraph
324CH(5)(b) provides that for the purposes of item 15 of the table in
subsection 324CH(1) a debt owed by the person or firm to a body corporate or
entity should be disregarded if:
·
the debt is on normal terms and conditions, and arises from the
acquisition of goods or services on normal trading terms from:
-
the audited body; or
-
an entity that the audited body controls; or
-
a related body corporate; and
·
the goods or services will be used by the person or firm:
-
for the personal use of the person or firm; or
-
in the ordinary course of business of the person or firm.
3.20 The
ordinary course of business exception will be replicated in subsection
324CH(5A), with some slight restructuring, to accord with the drafting style
adopted in primary legislation. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 56]
Money owed — deposit account
3.21 Item 16
of the table in subsection 324CH(1) of the Corporations Act prohibits amounts
owing to an audit firm (and various other persons and entities specified in the
tables in subsections 324CE(5), 324CF(5) and 324CG(9)) by the audited body
under a loan.
3.22 While amounts
owing by a bank under a cheque or savings account may not be regarded as a loan
in a commercial sense, the legal interpretation of a loan includes deposit
accounts with a bank.
3.23 This
presented a considerable burden for auditors of banks and other financial
institutions that offer cheque and savings account facilities to their
customers. It involves the closing of all the savings and cheque accounts held
by the audit firm and individual members of the audit team with the bank or
financial institution.
3.24 The
imposition of a regulatory requirement should not be disproportionate to the
risk of potential damage or harm. In the context of cheque and savings
accounts, the potential threat to auditor independence is perceived to be low,
particularly if the cheque or savings account facility is arranged in the
ordinary course of the audit client’s business and made under normal lending
procedures, terms and conditions.
3.25 The
Government accepted that it should clarify that amounts owing under a deposit
account that are ‘on call’ with an audited body that is an Australian ADI and
which are provided in the ordinary course of business of the audited body,
should be disregarded for purposes of item 16 of the table in subsection
324CH(1) of the Corporations Act.
3.26 Regulation
2M.6.05 of the Corporations Regulations (which was included in the Corporations
Amendment Regulations 2006 (No. 4)) modified the operation of the auditor
independence requirements by inserting in the Corporations Act a new paragraph
324CH(6)(b) which provides that for the purposes of item 16 of the table in
subsection 324CH(1), a debt owed to the person or firm by the audited
body, a related body corporate or an entity that the audited body controls
should be disregarded if:
·
the body, body corporate or entity is an Australian ADI; and
·
the amount is in a basic deposit product (which is defined in
section 761A of the Corporations Act) provided by the body, body corporate or
entity; and
·
the amount was deposited in the ordinary course of the business
of the audited body, body corporate or entity, and on the terms and conditions
that normally apply to basic deposit products provided by the body, body
corporate or entity.
3.27 The
exception relating to amounts on call will be replicated in subsection
324CH(6A). [Schedule
1, Part
1, item 57]
3.28 A
consequential drafting amendment will be made to table item 16 of subsection
324CH(1) referring to the new subsection 324CH(6A). [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 54]
Notification procedures
3.29 The audit
reforms in the CLERP 9 Act introduced notification procedures to ensure that
there was a staged procedure in place before an auditor’s appointment was
terminated on the grounds of the auditor’s failure to address an auditor
independence conflict of interest situation. The staged procedure involves the
following steps:
·
An audit firm is required to notify ASIC within 7 days if it
becomes aware that it has a conflict of interest situation that has not been
resolved (subsection 324CF(1A) of the Corporations Act). Similar requirements
apply to an individual auditor under subsection 324CE(1A) and to an audit
company under subsection 324CG(1A) of the Corporations Act. No notification is
required if the conflict is resolved before the end of the 7 day period. ASIC
is required to give a copy of the notice to the audit client so that the
company is put on notice that its auditor has an independence issue that needs
to be resolved.
·
Where the audited body is a public company, after the firm has
notified ASIC, the firm has a further 21 days (the remedial period) to resolve
the conflict of interest situation (subsection 327B(2B). Similar requirements
apply to an individual auditor under subsection 327B(2A) and to an audit
company under subsection 327B(2C) of the Corporations Act.
·
An audit firm thus has a maximum period of 28 days after it
becomes aware of a conflict of interest situation to rectify the conflict (the
initial 7 day period plus the 21 day remedial period)).
·
If the conflict of interest situation is not resolved at the end
of the 21 day remedial period, the audit firm’s appointment as auditor of the
particular audit client automatically terminates (subsection 327B(2B). Similar
requirements apply to an individual auditor under subsection 327B(2A) and an
audit company under subsection 327B(2C) of the Corporations Act.
3.30 A similar
notification regime applies under the general requirements for auditor
independence in subsections 324CA(1A), 324CB(1A) and 324CC(1A).
3.31 When the
CLERP 9 Act was drafted, the maximum period of 28 days was considered to
give an auditor sufficient time to rectify a conflict of interest situation.Â
However, concerns have been raised that complex circumstances do arise that
would not be able to be resolved with 28 days. ASIC was not given the
power to extend this period.
3.32 An
example where 28 days may not be sufficient to resolve a conflict of interest
situation, is where a professional member of the audit team acquires a
beneficial interest in shares of the audited body through a deceased estate.Â
This interest in the shares may not be able to be disposed of until the probate
in relation to the deceased estate has been finalised, which may take months or
even years.
3.33 The
Government agreed that the Corporations Act should be amended in order to give
ASIC the power to extend the period within which an auditor is required to
resolve a conflict of interest situation beyond the 21 day period under
subsections 327(2A), 327(2B) and 327(2C).
3.34 The
operation of Chapter 2M of the Act was modified by regulation 2M.6.05 of the
Corporations Regulations (which was included in the Corporations Amendment
Regulations 2006 (No. 4)) by omitting from subsections 327B(2A), (2B) and
(2C) of the Act the words ’21 days’ and inserting ‘21 days, or such longer
period as ASIC allows’.
3.35 These
amendments to the Corporations Regulations will be replicated in paragraphs
327B(2A)(b), (2B)(b) and (2C)(b) of the Corporations Act. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, item 63]
3.36 Similar
measures will be introduced in relation to an auditor of a registered scheme in
paragraphs 331AAA(2A)(b), (2B)(b) and (2C)(b) of the Corporations Act. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, item 64]
3.37 Consequential
amendments will be made to the notes to subsections 324CA(1A), 324CB(1A),
324CC(1A), 324CE(1A), 324CF(1A) and 324CG(1A) respectively. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, items
45, 46, 49 and 51]
Improvements arising out of public consultations on the comparative review of
Australia’s auditor independence requirements
Multiple former audit firm partner restriction
3.38 The
report of the HIH Royal Commission recommended that in implementing the
proposed CLERP 9 Act, the proposals for restrictions on employment relationships
between an auditor and the audit client should include ‘a prohibition on any
more than one former partner of an audit firm, at any time, being a director of
or taking a senior management position with the client’.
3.39 The HIH
recommendation was implemented as part of the CLERP 9 Act reforms in section
324CK of the Corporations Act.
3.40 In its
response to the report of the Taskforce on Reducing Regulatory Burdens on
Business, Rethinking Regulation, the Government announced that it would
review the multiple audit firm partner restriction by the end of 2006. The
Treasury progressed this review through its targeted consultation on the
comparative review.
3.41 All the
stakeholders agreed that the restriction in section 324CK serves a useful
purpose, however there was also agreement that some changes should be made to
address the perceived over reach of the existing requirement. The stakeholders
proposed that former partners of an audit firm and former directors of an
authorised audit firm who had departed from the firm or audit company for five
or more years should be excluded from the restriction.
3.42 A minimum
five year separation period was considered appropriate because the longer
former partners have been out of the firm, the less likely they will be in a
position to influence the current professional members of the audit team or be
so familiar with the audit approach and testing strategy that they are able to
circumvent them. A time limit is also easy to apply and enforce.
3.43 The
amendment to paragraph 324CK(c) will limit the application of the restriction
in section 324CK to a former member of an audit firm or former director of an
audit company who becomes an officer of the audited body within a period of
five years after the person ceased (or last ceased) to be a member of the audit
firm or a director of the audit company (as the case may be). [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 62]
3.44 It is noted that where a former partner or former director,
as described in paragraph 324CK(d), is also an officer of the audited body, the
time when that former partner or former director ceased to be a partner of the
firm or director of the audit company, is irrelevant in determining whether an
offence under this section has been committed by the person referred to in paragraph
324CK(c).
‘Cooling‑off’ period for former audit team partners
3.45 Section
324CI of the Corporations Act imposes a mandatory period of two years from the
date of departure from the firm before a former partner of an audit firm, or a
former director of an audit company, who was on the audit team can become an
officer of the audit client. Section 324CJ imposes a similar restriction on
the lead or review auditor of an authorised audit company.
3.46 The two
year ‘cooling-off’ period is in line with overseas requirements (although
Canada only imposes a one year ‘cooling-off’ period). The comparative review
noted, however, that the Australian requirement, unlike the position overseas,
applies regardless as to how far back the partner’s participation on the audit
team took place — the Australian requirement would, for example, apply to a
former partner who last worked on the audit team 20 years ago. Canada, the UK
and the US place a limit on the time of participation on an audit team prior to
the partner’s date of departure. All the key stakeholders agree that a similar
limit should be included in the Australian restriction.
3.47 Most of
the stakeholders have suggested that the two year ‘cooling-off’ period should
run from the time the person ceased to be a member of the audit team, rather
than from the time the person resigned from the audit firm.
3.48 The
amendment to paragraph 324CI(d) will ensure that the two year separation period
in relation to a former partner, or former director of an audit company,
commences from the date the auditor’s report under section 308 (annual
financial report) or section 309 (half year financial report) was made in
respect of the latest audit in which that partner or director participated. A
similar amendment will be made to s. 324CJ(d) in relation to a former lead
auditor or review auditor of an audit company. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, items 60
and 61]
Introduction of a ‘covered person’ approach to existing financial
relationship restrictions
3.49 The
auditor independence regimes in Australia, Canada, the European Commission, the
UK and the US have all adopted specific employment and financial relationship
restrictions between an audit firm and an audit client.
3.50 The
comparative review, however, identified that only Australia and the UK applied
these restrictions on an ‘all partner’ basis rather than focusing on those persons
in the audit firm with a close connection with a particular audit that is,. the
professional members of the audit team. In the US, a person who has a close
connection with an audit is referred to as a ‘covered person’.
3.51 All the
key stakeholders have agreed that the existing restrictions in relation to
financial investments could be limited to professional members of the audit
team rather than all the partners in the firm because it is considered that
auditor independence can best be protected by applying the restrictions to
persons in the firm who are in a position to influence the audit and also
because of the reduction in the compliance burden for both the firm and for
partners who have no connection with an audit. An example of a financial investment
restriction is the existing prohibition on a professional member of the audit
team owning a share in the audit client. It is noted in the context of this
proposal that ASIC would always be able to use the general auditor independence
obligations in the Corporations Act to challenge situations where a partner,
unconnected to an audit, held a financial investment in the audit client and in
the circumstances of the particular case, the investment gave rise to a
perception threat to the audit firm’s independence.
3.52 It is
proposed to achieve a ‘covered person’ approach in relation to the restrictions
on financial investments by:
·
expanding the scope of the definition of a ‘professional member
of the audit team’ in section 324AE of the Corporations Act to include some
additional persons who come within the scope of the definition of ‘audit team’
in the Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants (APES 110);
·
modifying the application of some of the existing prohibited
financial relationships as they apply to a member of the firm and to a
professional member of the audit team conducting the audit of the audited body;
and
·
making a number of consequential amendments and also addressing
some anomalies that have been identified in relation to the existing financial
relationship restrictions.
3.53 The
definition of a ‘professional member of the audit team’ in section 324AE will
be amended to include:
·
any person who recommends or decides what the lead auditor is to
be paid in connection with the performance of the audit; and
·
any person who provides, or takes part in providing,
quality control for the audit. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 44]
3.54 The table
in subsection 324CF(5) which applies to an audit firm will be amended to
achieve the following outcomes:
·
a member of an audit firm who is not a professional member of the
audit team conducting the audit will no longer be subject to the specific
financial investment restrictions in table items 10 to 14 of subsection
324CH(1);
·
a professional member of the audit team will be made subject to
the non‑loan and loan debt restrictions under subsection 324CH(1). This
addresses an anomaly in the CLERP 9 reforms which did not apply non‑loan
debt restrictions to a professional member of the audit team; and
·
for consistency purposes, the non‑loan and loan
restrictions applying to an immediate family member of a professional member of
the audit team conducting the audit of the audited body will be brought into
line with the corresponding requirements applying to a professional member of
the audit team. [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 50]
3.55 Corresponding
amendments will be made to the table in subsection 324CE(5) which applies to an
individual auditor and to the table in subsection 324CG(9) which applies to an
audit company to achieve similar outcomes applying to an audit firm. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, items 48
and 52]
3.56 Table
item 15 of subsection 324CH(1) will be amended in order to remove the existing
carve out for debts on non‑commercial terms up to $5000. This exemption
can no longer be justified in light of the introduction of the ordinary course
of business exemption which was introduced by regulation in mid‑2006.Â
The Government has taken the view that there should be zero tolerance of any
transaction on non‑commercial terms between an auditor and an audit
client because of the perception threat to auditor independence. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 53]
3.57 Table
item 18 of subsection 324CH(1) which applies to loan debt restrictions will be
deleted. As table item 15 of subsection 324CH(1) will no longer contain
the existing $5000 carve out, it is simpler to deal with both non-loan and loan
debt restrictions under table item 15. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 55]
3.58 The
new subsection 324CH(5B) will replicate the ordinary commercial loan exemption
in subsection 324CH(7) (which applies to table item 18) for purposes of the
revised table item 15. Subsection 324CH(7) will also be repealed. These
are consequential amendments as a result of the deletion of table item 18 of subsection 324CH(1).Â
[Schedule 1,
Part 1, items 56 and 58]
3.59 Subsection
324CH(8A) will clarify that a reference to a debt or amount owing in the
section includes a reference to a debt or amount that will (or may) be owed
under an existing agreement between the entities. The purpose of the amendment
is to ensure that a debt or amount owing under an existing agreement between
two entities, such as a loan, that has not yet crystallised as a ‘debt’ should
be covered by section 324CH. A similar amendment has been made in relation to
a liability under a guarantee of a loan. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 59]
Miscellaneous amendments
Drafting amendment
3.60 A
drafting error in table item 2 of subsection 324CE(5) will be addressed by
deleting the word ‘firm’ and replacing it by a reference to ‘individual
auditor’. [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 47]
ASIC relief powers
3.61 ASIC at
present has limited powers to exempt members of audit firms who are registered
company auditors from the requirements of Division 3 of Part 2M.4 (auditor
independence) of the Corporations Act.
3.62 The
auditor independence requirements of the CLERP 9 Act inserted new obligations
applying to members of firms who are not registered company auditors, to
retiring members of audit firms, to retiring directors of an audit company and
to retiring professional employees of an audit company.
3.63 ASIC’s
existing relief powers will be extended to cover members of an audit firm who
are not registered company auditors, former members of an audit firm, former
directors of an audit company and former professional employees of an audit
company. Section 342AA provides for ASIC to grant specific relief from the
auditor independence requirements to these categories of persons. Section
324AB will enable ASIC to make class orders in relation to these persons. The
criteria that ASIC must apply in making an order under either section 342AA or
section 342AB are set out in section 342AC. These criteria are identical to
the existing criteria in section 342 which apply to ASIC’s existing relief
powers. [Schedule
1, Part
1, item 65]
3.64
Subsection 342AA(5) is included to assist readers of the
legislation, as the instrument is not a legislative instrument within the
meaning of section 5 of the Legislative Instruments Act 2003. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 65]
Audit of compliance plan
3.65 Subsection
601HG(1) requires a registered managed investment scheme’s compliance plan to
be audited by a registered company auditor. A registered company auditor must
be a natural person and therefore an authorised audit company is ineligible to
be appointed as the auditor of a compliance plan. This is inconsistent with
subsection 601HG(4A) which assumes that the compliance plan can be audited by
an authorised audit company.
3.66 This
anomaly will be addressed by amending section 601HG to make it clear that a
registered company auditor, an audit firm or an authorised audit company is
eligible to be appointed as the auditor of a compliance plan. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, item 67]
Deletion of cross reference to a repealed provision
3.67 Section
990A provides that nothing in sections 990B to 990H (dealing with the
appointment of an auditor by a financial services licensee) applies where the
licensee is a body corporate to which section 327 applies. Section 327
was repealed by the CLERP 9 Act. A revised section 990A will provide that nothing
in sections 990B to 990H applies to a financial services licensee that is a
public company. [Schedule 1,
Part 1, item 127]
Appointment of auditor by licensee
3.68 Section
990B will be amended to clarify that an individual person and an authorised
audit company can be appointed by a financial services licensee to audit its
financial statements. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 128]
Auditor’s right of access to records, information etc
3.69 Subsections
990I(2) and (3) provide that an auditor of a financial services licensee may
require assistance from the licensee and where the licensee is a body
corporate, from any senior manager of the licensee. The reference to ‘senior
manager’ is in contrast to the pre‑CLERP 9 Act provisions which referred
to an ‘executive officer’. A director and secretary of a body corporate came
within the scope of the definition of an ‘executive officer’ in the pre‑CLERP
9 legislation. The definition of ‘senior manager’ expressly excludes a
director or secretary of the body corporate.
3.70 The
measures in subsections 990I(2) and (3) will enable ASIC to seek assistance
from a director, secretary or senior manager of the body corporate where the
licensee is a body corporate. [Schedule 1, Part 1, items 129 and 130]
Application and transitional provisions
Anomalies arising from CLERP 9
3.71 The
amendments relating to the time when an auditor’s independence declaration must
be given to the directors and the reporting obligation in relation to
inadvertent breaches in the auditor independence declaration will apply to a
report for a financial year that ends on or after the day on which those
amendments commence (the day on which the Act receives the Royal Assent). [Schedule 1, Part 6,
item 233]
Improvements arising out of public consultations on the comparative review
of Australia’s auditor independence requirements
3.72 The
amendments which will give effect to a ‘covered person’ approach in relation to
the auditor independence restrictions on financial relationships will apply to
an audit of the financial report for a financial year or an audit or review of
the financial report for a half‑year in a financial year, if the
financial year begins on or after the day on which the relevant amendments
commence (the day on which the Act receives the Royal Assent). [Schedule 1, Part 6,
item 234]
3.73 The
amendments which will modify the way in which the two‑year ‘cooling‑off’
period is calculated under sections 324CI and 324CJ, and the amendment to the
multiple former audit partner restriction, will apply to any person who ceases
to be a member of an audit firm, a director of an audit company or a
professional employee of an audit company whether the person so ceases before
or after the day on which those amendments commence (the day on which the Act
receives the Royal Assent). [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 235]
3.74 The
amendments in sections 327B(2A), (2B) and (2C) and sections 331AAA(2A), (2B)
and (2C) which will empower ASIC to extend the period within which an auditor
is required to resolve a conflict of interest situation will apply in relation
to information given to ASIC under those provisions on or after the day the
amendments commence (the day on which the Act receives the Royal Assent). [Schedule 1,
Part 6, item
236]
Chapter 4
Corporate Governance
Outline of chapter
4.1 The Bill
contains amendments to the related party transaction provisions in the
Corporations Act and to the administration of approvals for certain company
names and constitutions.
Context of amendments
4.2 The
changes outlined in this chapter contribute to the broader themes of the Bill
to facilitate a simpler corporate regulatory system that delivers continued
consumer protection, reduced compliance costs and greater ability for companies
to attract capital.
4.3 Within
the corporate governance context, the related party transaction provisions are
an important check on the powers of the board to manage the affairs of a
company. However, obtaining member approval for every related party
transaction may unnecessarily put a company to a disproportionate compliance
expense where the value of the transaction is small. The amendments in the
Bill are aimed at addressing the potential for disproportionate compliance
costs to cause corporate resources to be allocated inefficiently.
4.4 This
amendment has its origins in the Corporate and Financial Services Review
Proposals Paper of November 2006.
4.5 In
addition, currently ministerial approval is required for the use of certain
company names and changes to the constitutions of certain companies. Names and
constitutions are basic features of companies, and the Bill provides for more
streamlined administrative processes where approvals or notifications are
required.
Summary of new law
4.6
The Bill will make amendments to the Corporations Act to:
·
allow public companies to give small financial benefits to
related parties without seeking member approval in certain circumstances;
·
allow delegation to ASIC of the function of consenting to grant a
particular company name notwithstanding it is identical to another name or
otherwise unacceptable; and
·
remove the requirement for companies exempted from using
‘limited’ in their name to seek ministerial approval for changes to their
constitutions, and replace it with a requirement to notify ASIC of any changes.
Comparison of key features of new law and
current law
|
|
|
|
|
|
Member approval will not be required for giving a
financial benefit to a related party which is at or below a minimum
prescribed level, aggregated over a financial year.
|
There is no general minimum level for payments to related
parties at or below which member approval is not required.
|
|
Approval of identical and otherwise unacceptable
company names
|
|
The ability to consent to the use of a name that is
determined identical or unacceptable may be delegated to an officer of the
Department, a member of ASIC or a staff member of ASIC.
|
The ability to consent to the use of a name that is
determined identical or unacceptable requires ministerial approval.Â
Currently, this may be delegated to an officer of the Department.
|
|
Pre-existing licences allowing companies to omit the
word ‘limited’ from their names
|
|
Australian companies that hold a pre‑existing
licence to exempt the term ‘limited’ from their names will be required to
notify ASIC of any changes to their constitution.
|
Australian companies that hold a pre‑existing
licence to exempt the term ‘limited’ from their names must seek the approval
of the Minister responsible for corporations law to make certain changes to
their constitutions.
|
Detailed explanation of new law
Related party approval threshold
4.1 The
related party transactions provisions in Part 2E.1 of the Corporations Act
require that public companies obtain member approval before they can give any
financial benefit to a related party (such as a director, a director’s spouse,
a controlling entity, or entities controlled by mutual entities), unless the
benefit fits within certain exceptions.
4.2 The
policy rationale for the related party transactions provisions is to protect
shareholders’ investments from being eroded by the board approving transactions
with related parties that are non‑commercial or non‑arms’-length in
nature. These transactions may not be in the best interests of the company and
may result in the company missing out on commercial advantages or profits that
would otherwise be gained where the transactions are with non‑related
parties.
4.3 The cost
for business of obtaining member approval for related party transactions not
otherwise allowed by the law can be substantial. If the related party benefit
is small, then the compliance cost may well outweigh any governance benefits
from requiring member approval.
4.4 The
Bill will insert a provision into the Corporations Act to provide that member
approval is not required for giving a financial benefit to a related party
which is at or below a prescribed amount aggregated over a financial year. [Schedule 1, Part
2, item 190]Â
4.5 It is
expected that the amount initially prescribed will be $5,000.
4.6 The new
provision will repeal and replace the current section 213 and absorb its
effect. The current provision allows payments at or below $2,000 to related
parties who are directors or directors’ spouses to be made without member
approval. Under the new provision, member approval will not be required for
giving a financial benefit to these related parties (ie directors or directors’
spouses), which is at or below the prescribed level aggregated over a financial
year.
4.7 By
referring to ‘amounts or values’, the provision contemplates both monetary and
non‑monetary financial benefits. It is intended that non‑monetary
financial benefits will be valued by reference to ordinary valuation concepts.
4.8 In
determining the total amounts of values to which the provision applies, the
provision uses a similar aggregation method to the current section 213. That
is, the amount is worked out by adding all the
amounts or values of financial benefits given to
the related party in the financial year from the public company or
entity and the companies and entities it controls when the financial benefit is
given, and disregarding any amounts repaid or falling under another related party
transaction exception.
4.9 The new
section 213 will not interfere with the requirements on directors or officers
to exercise their powers and discharge their duties in accordance with other
provisions of the Corporations Act, including the duties in Part 2D.1 and rules
under the general law.
Approval of identical and otherwise unacceptable company names
4.10 Currently,
section 147 of the Corporations Act provides that a name is available for use
by a company unless the name is identical to another or unacceptable with
reference to the rules in the Corporations Regulations.Â
Section 601DC provides for a similar legislative scheme that applies to
registrable Australian bodies and foreign companies. Regulation 2B.6.01 of the
Corporations Regulations provides rules for determining whether a name is
identical or unacceptable. As there may be particular reasons for a company
wishing to use an identical or otherwise unacceptable name, the Corporations
Act allows companies use of these names if the application receives ministerial
consent.
4.11 The
Minister may delegate the function of considering such an application to an
officer of the Department under subsection 1345A(1) of the
Corporations Act.Â
4.12 In the
first instance, companies lodge these applications with ASIC, which then refers
the applications to the Treasury. Given ASIC’s role as the corporate regulator and manager of
the company register, a more efficient administrative arrangement would be for
ASIC to determine these name applications.
4.13 The
Bill inserts a new subsection 1345A(1A) for the Minister, by signed instrument,
to delegate the function of determining whether a particular company name should
be granted, notwithstanding the name is identical or otherwise unacceptable, to
a member of ASIC (ie a commissioner) or a staff member of ASIC. [Schedule 1, Part
2, item 197]
Pre-existing licences allowing companies to omit the word ‘limited’ from
their names
4.14 A number
of Australian companies hold a licence to omit the word ‘limited’ from their
names. Such licences were generally issued by State and Territory Attorneys‑General
during the period when corporate law was a responsibility of the State and
Territory Governments.
4.15 These
licences generally require approval of the Minister responsible for corporate
law, or another Minister of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory, or an
officer, instrumentality or agency of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory
for any changes to the constitutions of these companies.
4.16 A more
efficient administrative arrangement would be for these companies to notify
ASIC of changes to their constitutions, given ASIC’s role as the corporate
regulator and manager of the company register.
4.17 The Bill
inserts new subsection 151(2AA) which replaces the requirement to seek approval
for any changes to the constitutions of companies with pre‑existing
licences with a requirement to notify ASIC of any changes to their constitutions.Â
[Schedule 1,
Part 2, item 188]
4.18 ASIC will
have the power to revoke a company’s licence if the company fails to notify
ASIC of a change to its constitution, in addition to its current powers to
revoke a licence in subsection 151(3). [Schedule 1, Part 2, item 189]
Application and transitional provisions
Related party approval threshold
4.19 The
amendment to remove the requirement for member approval of a related party
transaction at or below a prescribed level aggregated over a financial year
applies to a company’s financial year that begins on or after the
1 July 2007, which is the day the amendment commences. [Schedule 1, Part
6, item 240]
Company names and pre‑existing licences
4.20 The
amendments to delegate approval of an identical or otherwise unacceptable name
and the amendments to require a company with pre‑existing licence to
notify ASIC of changes to its constitution commence on 1 July 2007.
Outline of chapter
5.1 This Bill
contains six measures amending a number of provisions in the Corporations Act
relating to fundraisings by corporate entities. The amendments are generally
intended to facilitate fundraising by providing relief from unnecessary
regulatory requirements such as the need, in some circumstances, to provide a
disclosure document, removing unnecessary inconsistencies between different
parts of the Corporations Act, or relaxing certain unnecessary restrictions
(for example, time periods and amounts that can be raised under particular
provisions).
Context of amendments
General background
5.2 The
measures in this chapter relate to the fundraising provisions in the
Corporations Act (mainly Chapter 6D, but also some parts of Part 7.9).Â
Chapter 6D was inserted in the Corporations Act by the Corporate Law
Economic Reform Program Act 1999. It builds on the previous general
prospectus disclosure rules, but includes a number of additional provisions
relating to the use of new instruments such as short form prospectuses and
offer information statements, clarification of the persons liable for
contraventions of the provisions and a new definition of sophisticated
investors.
5.3 The
introduction of the Government’s new regime for the regulation of financial
services in Chapter 7 of the Corporations Act occurred in 2001 through the Financial
Services Reform Act 2001. One of the elements of this Act was that
interests in managed investment schemes were taken out of the Chapter 6D
fundraising regime and placed under a new disclosure regime in Part 7.9 of the
Corporations Act. The Part 7.9 regime targets certain investment products
marketed mainly to small retail investors. It was considered that such
products had somewhat different disclosure requirements which justified
treating them differently from the securities subject to Chapter 6D.
5.4 The
Chapter 6D and Part 7.9 provisions have on the whole worked well and have
supported a strong market in fundraisings since they were introduced. According
to a recent survey conducted by KPMG, total equity fundraisings in Australia in
2005/06 amounted to A$42.5 billion, which represents an increase of
42 per cent since 2000/01.
5.5 Over
time, however, it has become apparent that there are some shortcomings in the
practical application of the provisions. Some of these affect the smooth
operation of market processes, while others are more substantial in their
effects, resulting in the skewing of market outcomes. The measures contained
in this Chapter are intended to address a number of these shortcomings.
Rights issue disclosure for quoted securities and other financial products
5.6 Rights
issues are a method of fundraising in which existing members in a company or
managed investment scheme are given the opportunity to purchase new shares or
units in proportion to their holdings on specified terms. The current
legislation requires that rights issues must be accompanied by a prospectus or
Product Disclosure Statement. As a result, the use of rights issues as a
fundraising instrument has to some extent been superseded by other forms of
fundraising with less onerous disclosure requirements. An example is a
placement of shares to institutional investors, which can be accomplished
without a prospectus or Product Disclosure Statement. One of the consequences
of such placements is that existing members may be disadvantaged. Members with
small holdings, for example, are generally not able to participate in
institutional placements and therefore cannot acquire shares or units at the
discount typically offered in such placements.
5.7 It is
proposed to abolish the requirement to issue a prospectus or Product Disclosure
Statement for rights issues of quoted securities or interests
in managed investment schemes. The scope of the exemption is limited to
quoted securities and interests in managed investment schemes on the grounds
that the combination of an original prospectus or Product Disclosure Statement
on listing and the continuous disclosure rules ensure the provision of an
appropriate flow of information to members which will facilitate informed
decision‑making in relation to a rights issue.
Small scale offerings
5.8 This
measure will facilitate small‑scale fundraisings by granting some further
measure of relief from the full disclosure requirements of the Corporations
Act. The objective is to promote the creation and expansion of new businesses
through easier access to capital.
5.9 The
disclosure requirements in the Corporations Act do not apply to professional
and sophisticated investors as defined in the legislation. New businesses,
especially in ‘sunrise’ industries such as information technology or
biotechnology, often rely on such investors to provide seed or start-up
capital. The current definitions of professional and sophisticated investors
in Chapter 6D and Chapter 7 of the Corporations Act are not entirely
consistent.
5.10 The
Corporations Amendment Regulations 2005 (No. 5) introduced changes which
significantly expanded the scope of the wholesale investor category in
Chapter 7 of the Corporations Act to whom the disclosure framework
specified in that chapter does not apply. These changes were not applied to
the sophisticated investor and professional investor exemptions in Chapter 6D.Â
There does not appear to be any justification for this difference in the
disclosure exemptions, and it is therefore proposed to align the definitions
between the two chapters.
5.11 The use
of Offer Information Statements, as defined in Chapter 6D of the Corporations
Act, permits reduced disclosure requirements compared to a full prospectus.Â
The market to date has not made wide use of this instrument, and it is proposed
to provide further incentives to promote the wider use of offer information
statements.
Secondary sale issues
5.12 This
measure intends to facilitate the operation of the provisions in the
Corporations Act relating to secondary sales of existing securities (as opposed
to sales of shares to be newly issued). It includes a number of separate
sub-measures.
5.13 Secondary
sales of securities can be effected without a disclosure document under section
708A of the Corporations Act provided that a number of requirements set out in
this section are satisfied.
5.14 Section
708A does not extend to secondary sales of securities that were initially
transferred without disclosure by a person controlling the entity that issued
the securities (a controller). Controllers therefore typically have to obtain
relief from ASIC on a case‑by‑case basis to allow on‑sale of
those securities without disclosure. Submissions have been made that there is
no justification for not allowing controllers to benefit from the general
relief from the disclosure requirements provided in section 708A.
5.15 A further
requirement for the secondary sales exemption in subsection 708A(5) is that the
securities must have been listed for at least 12 months prior to sale. It has
been proposed that this requirement is excessively restrictive and that the
required listing period could be reduced while still satisfying the underlying
policy rationale for the provision.
5.16 Certain
types of quoted securities are classified as ‘continuously quoted securities’
in the Corporations Act if they satisfy a number of conditions. An example of
such conditions is that the body issuing the securities must be listed on a
financial market. An offer of continuously quoted securities enjoys
substantial relief from the disclosure requirements in Chapter 6D and Part 7.9
of the Corporations Act where the securities have been quoted for at least 12
months. The reason is that such securities have been subject to the continuous
disclosure rules for a significant period of time, during which they have had
to disclose all price-sensitive information to the market on an ongoing basis.
5.17 Submissions
have been made that the 12 month period is unnecessarily long and could be
reduced without undermining the protection offered to investors through the
provision. An appropriate period of 3 months has been suggested.
5.18 Listed
entities are subject to the continuous disclosure requirements in the
Corporations Act, whereby they must release all price-sensitive information to
the market on an ongoing basis. Under the Australian Securities Exchange
Listing Rules, there are certain situations where listed entities are allowed
to withhold such information from the market. An example would be an important
transaction where the negotiations had not been concluded yet and disclosure of
information relating to the transaction might cause it to fail.
5.19 The
Corporations Act requires that before secondary sales of securities and other
financial products effected without disclosure can proceed, such information
which has been withheld in accordance with the Listing Rules must be released
to the market. The rationale for this requirement is to ensure that investors
accepting such offers for sale are fully informed as to the state of the entity
and its business. The information is released by providing a notice to the
Australian Securities Exchange complying with certain conditions relating to
content and timing of its release. This notice is generally known as a
‘cleansing notice’.
5.20 Submissions
from stakeholders have pointed out that some technical problems arise relating
to the timing of the release of the cleansing notice to the market. The
current wording of the relevant provision in the Corporations Act states that
the notice must be released on the day before trading of these securities
commences. This forces investors purchasing securities or other financial
products offered to them in a secondary sale effected without disclosure to
hold them for one day after they are transferred before they can be traded,
even though existing securities of the same entity can be traded at the same time.Â
This in effect requires holders of such securities to identify individually
which securities can and which cannot be traded, which is impossible given the
fungible nature of securities. Changes to the timing provisions relating to
the release of the cleansing notice are necessary to improve the working of
this part of the Corporations Act.
Employee unlisted share schemes
5.21 Employee
share schemes are facilities that allow employees of a company to participate
in the ownership of their employer through the acquisition of shares in the
company. Based on the benefits employee share schemes may bring to the wider
economy the Australian Government has a general policy of supporting the use of
employee share schemes.
5.22 The
following issues may arise under the Corporations Act in relation to the
operation of an employee share scheme:
·
Disclosure:Â Broadly speaking, unless a relevant exception
applies, companies are required to issue a prospectus for their employee share
scheme unless it involves no more than 20 employees in any 12 month period and
raises no more than $2 million.
·
Licensing:Â Where the employee share scheme offer document
contains financial product advice about the scheme, the licensing provisions in
the Corporations Act may require the issuer to hold an Australian Financial
Services Licence for giving that financial product advice. Actual operation of
the scheme may also require an Australian Financial Services Licence for
dealing in securities or for providing a custodial or depository service.
·
Hawking:Â The offer of securities or other
financial products under an employee share scheme may breach the hawking
provisions in the Corporations Act.
5.23 Class
Order CO 03/184 issued by ASIC provides some relief from these requirements for
listed companies, subject to certain conditions. The rationale for this relief
is that listed companies are subject to the continuous disclosure requirements,
and therefore provide an adequate flow of information to the market (including
their employees) on an ongoing basis.
5.24 Unlisted
companies currently do not enjoy any relief from the disclosure, licensing and
hawking provisions listed above.
Advertising rules for offers of securities requiring a disclosure document
and for offers or issues of other financial products
5.25 There are
currently differences in the requirements relating to advertising and publicity
for offers of securities requiring a prospectus, compared to those for offers
or issues of other financial products. The requirements applying to other
financial products are less restrictive and allow product providers more
freedom in designing their advertisements. There does not appear to be any
justification for the differences in the two advertising regimes.
Stapled securities disclosure
5.26 A stapled
security consists of a unit in a managed investment scheme and a security such
as a share. These two instruments cannot be disposed of separately but are
‘stapled’ together and must be traded as a single unit. The two components of
the stapled security are frequently an interest in the trust holding the assets
of the entity (an interest in a managed investment scheme) and a share in the
company carrying out the asset management and/or development functions (a
security). The offer of such a stapled security must be made under a Product
Disclosure Statement (for the interest in a managed investment scheme
component) and a prospectus (for the security component).
5.27 Due to
differences in the disclosure regimes for prospectuses and Product Disclosure
Statements, issues may arise in the preparation of a combined
prospectus/Product Disclosure Statement. One of these issues is that there are
no provisions allowing a Replacement Product Disclosure Statement to be
prepared, whereas Chapter 6D contains provisions permitting lodgement of a
replacement prospectus. As a result, a replacement combined prospectus/Product
Disclosure Statement cannot be prepared if it is necessary to correct an error
or omission in the original documents. To lodge a replacement document, ASIC
is required to issue a stop order over the existing document, followed by the
lodgment of a new Product Disclosure Statement. This triggers a new exposure
period and lodgment fee.
5.28 There
does not appear to be any justification for the differences between the
prospectus and Product Disclosure Statement regimes in relation to replacement
documents for stapled securities offers. Substantial relief could be provided
to the market by aligning the two regimes in this regard.
Summary of new law
Rights issue disclosure for quoted securities and other financial products
5.29 The first
measure amends the disclosure requirements relating to rights issues by listed
entities. It provides that such rights issues may be conducted without the
provision of a prospectus or Product Disclosure Statement. The relief is
limited to rights issues of securities and interests in managed investment
schemes.
5.30 The
technical amendments required to achieve the desired exemption are relatively
complex. This is mainly because rights issues can be conceived of as
consisting of two elements, a ‘right’ to apply for securities or interests in
managed investment schemes and an offer of securities or interests in managed
investment schemes. Relief from the disclosure requirements must be achieved
separately for these two elements.
5.31 Rights
issues often occur in connection with significant transactions which have not
been fully disclosed to the market, for example because negotiations for the
transaction have not been completed. Provision is therefore made requiring
that such information be disclosed before a rights issue can proceed. The
appropriate mechanism for achieving this is a requirement for providing a
cleansing notice modelled on the requirements of section 708A of the
Corporations Act before the rights issue offers are made.
5.32 Furthermore,
in certain circumstances rights issues may potentially lead to a shareholder or
underwriter acquiring control or significantly increasing voting power. It is
vital to ensure that members are provided with full information on the
consequences of any potential effects on control of the entity. The
requirement for a cleansing notice to be provided is therefore augmented with
appropriate additional requirements to ensure that disclosure of this
information occurs.
Small scale offerings
5.33 The
second measure applies the relevant provisions included in Corporations
Amendment Regulations 2005 (No. 5) to the definitions of sophisticated and
professional investors in Chapter 6D, which will expand the number of investors
able to take advantage of the relief provided to these categories of investors.
5.34 In order
to encourage the wider use of the Offer Information Statement the maximum
amount of money that may be raised using an Offer Information Statement (when
combined with other funds previously raised) is increased to $10 million from
$5 million. However, it is noted that due to the reduced disclosure
requirements Offer Information Statements are not appropriate for use in
listing entities on a financial market.
Secondary sale issues
5.35 The third
measure provides that controllers may arrange sales of securities they hold
without disclosure subject to the existing section 708A conditions, but
subject to the requirement that the controller and the company provide a
cleansing notice as set out in paragraph 708A(5)(e) in order to provide up
to date price sensitive information to the market.
5.36 An entity
wishing to rely on the disclosure exemption in section 708A should have
some track record of complying with its continuous disclosure obligations. The
required period for quotation of the securities sold is therefore reduced to
three months to provide such a track record while providing some relief from
the current requirement of 12 months.
5.37 A
corresponding reduction is made to section 713 as a similar logic applies in
that context. This means that continuously quoted securities as defined in the
Corporations Act can benefit from reduced disclosure requirements provided they
have been quoted for a period of at least 3 months.
5.38 Similar
requirements apply to financial products covered under Part 7.9 of the
Corporations Act. Corresponding amendments are made to that part of the Act
reducing the quotation period to three months before secondary sales of such
financial products without disclosure can proceed. Further amendments ensure
that financial products falling under the definition of continuously quoted
securities can benefit from reduced disclosure requirements provided they have
been quoted for a period of three months.
5.39 The
problem arising in relation to the timing of the provision of the cleansing
notice is addressed by changing the wording of the relevant provisions so that
the release of the notice may occur at any time before trading of the
securities commences. This removes the need to wait for one day before
starting trading. Corresponding requirements apply to other financial products
in Part 7.9 of the Corporations Act and similar relief is provided for such
products as well.
Employee unlisted share schemes
5.40 The
fourth measure provides relief from certain of the licensing and hawking
restrictions of the Corporations Act for employee share schemes for unlisted
companies. This relief is made subject to the condition that such employee
share schemes must be accompanied by a disclosure document such as an Offer
Information Statement or a prospectus. Listed entities may also take advantage
of this relief if they wish, subject to the same condition.
5.41 It is
considered that Offer Information Statements as defined in Chapter 6D of the Corporations
Act provide an appropriate level of disclosure for employees of companies and
their financial advisers regarding the information required to make a decision
as to whether to participate in an employee share scheme.
5.42 Offer
Information Statements impose a lower level of disclosure than a full
prospectus. This is due to the defined scope of the contents of an Offer
Information Statement as set out in section 715, which reduces the requirement
for legal advice and assistance in ensuring that the contents of the document
are consistent with the requirements of the law. There is a cap on the total
amount of funds that can be raised under an Offer Information Statement, which
is currently $5 million and will be raised to $10 million under an associated
measure. The Corporations Act provides a methodology for calculating the
amount of funds raised for the purposes of this requirement. To facilitate the
use of Offer Information Statements for employee share schemes, this measure
removes amounts raised under an employee share scheme from this calculation.
5.43 The
relief provided is made subject to a number of requirements which are also
applied in ASIC Class Order CO 03/184 relating to employee share schemes for
listed companies. Employee share scheme offers satisfying these criteria are
defined as eligible offers.
5.44 At this
stage only employee share schemes involving the issue of securities may use an
Offer Information Statement as their disclosure document. Employee share
schemes involving a sale of securities (for example through a wholly-owned
trustee) will still have to provide a prospectus.
5.45 The
following relief from the licensing requirements for eligible offers as defined
above is provided:
·
Relief for an issuer from the requirement to hold an Australian
Financial Services Licence for the provision of general advice in connection
with the offers.
·
Relief for an issuer and its controlled entities from the
requirement to hold an Australian Financial Services Licence for dealing in a financial
product where the operation of an employee share scheme requires the purchase
or disposal of shares which occurs:
–      through a person who holds an Australian Financial Services
Licence authorising the holder to deal in financial products; or
–      in an overseas jurisdiction through a person who is licensed
or otherwise authorised to deal in financial products in that jurisdiction.
·
Relief for an issuer and its controlled entities from the
licensing requirement for the provision of a custodial and depository service,
including licensing relief for dealing in a financial product in the course of
providing such a custodial and depository service.
5.46 Amendments
are made providing relief from the hawking provisions in the Corporations Act
for eligible employee share schemes, to allow companies to contact their
employees and make participation offers to them.
5.47 Contribution
plans are exempted from the managed investment and licensing provisions in the
Corporations Act. A contribution plan is an arrangement under which funds are
deducted from employees’ salaries, including through salary sacrifice
arrangements, and used to pay for shares under an employee share scheme.Â
Without the relief provided such plans may need to be registered under the
managed investments provisions of the Corporations Act in Chapter 5C and may
also attract the licensing requirements in Chapter 7 of the same act.
Advertising rules for offers of securities requiring a disclosure document
and for offers of other financial products
5.48 The fifth
measure aligns the advertising requirements for offers of quoted securities
with the advertising requirements that apply to other financial products.Â
Amendments are also made aligning the advertising provisions applying to offers
of unquoted securities after the lodgment of a disclosure document with those
applying to other financial products.
5.49 The
provisions regarding advertising of unquoted securities prior to the lodgment
of a disclosure document remain unchanged. The strict pre-lodgment advertising
restrictions for unquoted securities were introduced to ensure that the
requirement to have balanced and complete disclosure in the prospectus was not
negated by the content of advertisements not subject to such restrictions or
requirements. These restrictions have accordingly been considered a
fundamental part of the Chapter 6D disclosure regime.
5.50 ASIC’s
stop order powers are extended to allow it to intervene in case of misleading
and deceptive advertising of securities, as it is currently able to do in the
case of other financial products under Chapter 7 of the Corporations Act.
Stapled securities disclosure
5.51 The sixth
measure rectifies the issue regarding lodgment of replacement combined
prospectus/Product Disclosure Statements by extending the application of the
provisions relating to replacement prospectuses to allow for Replacement Product
Disclosure Statements for stapled securities.
Comparison of key features of new law and
current law
|
|
|
|
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Rights issue disclosure
|
Rights issues for quoted securities and other financial
products are not required to provide a prospectus or Product Disclosure
Statement. Instead they are required to provide a cleansing notice to the
market. The notice must include information relating to the potential effect
of the rights issue on the control of the entity.
|
Rights issues for quoted securities and other financial
products are required to provide a prospectus or Product Disclosure
Statement.
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|
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|
Small scale offerings
|
The definitions of professional and sophisticated
investors in Chapter 6D are aligned with those in Chapter 7.
The total amount of money that may be raised under an
Offer Information Statement is $10 million.
|
The definitions of professional and sophisticated
investors in Chapter 7 are broader in scope than those in Chapter 6D.
The total amount of money that may be raised under an
Offer Information Statement is $5 million.
|
|
Secondary sale issues
|
Controllers of listed entities are able to take advantage
of the disclosure relief available for secondary sales of securities and
other financial products, subject to the requirement that a cleansing notice
is provided by both the controller and the entity that issued the securities
or other financial products.
Secondary sales without disclosure are possible for
securities and other financial products quoted for a minimum of 3 months.Â
The reduced disclosure requirements applying to continuously quoted securities
and other financial products are available after they have been quoted for a
minimum of 3 months.
|
Controllers of listed entities must provide a disclosure
document for secondary sales of securities or other financial products, or
obtain specific relief from ASIC.
Secondary sales without disclosure are possible for
securities and other financial products quoted for a minimum of 12 months.Â
The reduced disclosure requirements applying to continuously quoted
securities and other financial products are available after they have been
quoted for a minimum of 12 months.
The cleansing notice required for secondary sales of
securities and other financial products must be provided on the day before
the sales offers are made (but not later than 5 days after the securities or
other financial products were issued).
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Secondary sale issues (continued)
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The cleansing notice required for secondary sales of
securities and other financial products without disclosure may be provided at
any time before the sale offers are made (but not later than 5 days after the
securities or other financial products were issued).
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Employee share schemes
|
Employee share schemes and contribution plans enjoy relief
from a specified range of licensing and hawking requirements in the
Corporations Act.
Amounts raised under an employee share scheme are not
counted for the calculation of the total amount raised under an Offer
Information Statement.
|
Employee share schemes and contribution plans for unlisted
companies do not enjoy any relief from the licensing and hawking requirements
in the Corporations Act.
Amounts raised under an employee share scheme are counted
for the calculation of the total amount raised under an Offer Information
Statement.
|
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Advertising rules
|
The prospectus advertising requirements are aligned with
those for Product Disclosure Statements, except for advertising prior to
lodgement of a prospectus.
ASIC stop-order powers are extended to cover advertising
of securities.
|
The restrictions on advertising of offers of securities
subject to a prospectus are more prescriptive than those applying to offers
of other financial products made under a Product Disclosure Statement.
ASIC’s stop-order powers do not extend to advertising for
offers of securities.
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Stapled securities disclosure
|
Replacement Product Disclosure Statements may be lodged to
correct an error or omission in the original statement in the case of stapled
securities.
|
No provision is made for a Replacement Product Disclosure
Statement.
|
Detailed explanation of new law
Rights issue disclosure for quoted securities and other financial products
5.1 A
definition of a rights issue to which the intended relief will apply is
provided in section 9A. The definition states that it encompasses offers of
securities or of interests in a managed investment scheme of the same class to
existing holders of these products in proportion to the extent of their
holdings. The definition is worded to include assignees of the existing
holders. This ensures that certain types of rights issues where the rights can
be sold (so-called ‘renounceable’ rights issues) fall within the scope of the
relief offered.
5.2 Offers
must be made to all such holders in Australia and New Zealand. A provision is
included allowing entities conducting a rights offer to exclude persons in
specific overseas jurisdictions otherwise entitled to participate in the issue
subject to certain conditions. This is mainly intended to avoid them having to
bear the costs of complying with the disclosure and other regulatory
requirements in jurisdictions where there are only a limited number of existing
holders of securities or interests in a scheme. In the case of renounceable
rights issues, the rights attributable to such excluded persons must be sold
and the net proceeds given to them. This provision is modelled on existing
relief provided in the Australian Securities Exchange Listing Rules. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 10]
5.3 Offers of
securities under a rights issue are exempted from the disclosure requirements
in Chapter 6D of the Corporations Act, subject to a number of conditions
required by section 708AA. These include requirements that the securities must
not have been suspended from trading for more than a specified maximum number
of days, and that they have not been exempted from the disclosure requirements
to which they would normally be subject.
5.4 ASIC may
also make a determination disallowing the disclosure relief, if the entity has
breached any of a number of key provisions in the Corporations Act. These
include provisions such as the financial reporting requirements in Chapter 2M,
the requirement for a trust deed and trustee in relation to an offer of
debentures under Chapter 2L, as well as key requirements in relation to the
continuous disclosure provisions. A provision is included stating that such a
determination is not a legislative instrument. This provision is declaratory
of the law and solely intended to assist readers, as these determinations are
not legislative instruments within the meaning of section 5 of the Legislative
Instruments Act 2003.
5.5 A final
condition is that the entity must provide a cleansing notice to the market
within 24 hours before it makes offers of the securities under the rights
issue. Conditions apply to the content and preparation of the cleansing
notice, defining what kind of information must be disclosed and what action
must be taken if a notice is found to be defective. Finally, a specific
requirement is imposed to disclose information relating to any potential
effects the rights issue may have on the control of the company. The majority
of the conditions imposed on the relief provided under this measure are
modelled on the conditions applying to secondary sale offers of securities that
may be conducted without disclosure under section 708A in Chapter 6D of the
Corporations Act. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 78]
5.6 The same
relief subject to the same conditions is provided for rights issue offers of
interests in a managed investment scheme under a rights issue by section
1012DAA. ASIC may make a similar determination as outlined above. A provision
is included stating that such a determination is not a legislative instrument.Â
This provision is declaratory of the law and is solely intended to assist
readers, as these determinations are not legislative instruments within the
meaning of section 5 of the Legislative Instruments Act 2003. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 137]
5.7 The
‘rights’ element of a rights issue is defined as the right to acquire
securities or interests in a managed investment scheme. These rights are
included in the definition of securities in Chapter 7 of the Corporations Act
by paragraph 761A(e). This ensures that the investor protection requirements
contained in that Chapter apply to certain activities in relation to such
rights. A financial adviser offering advice in relation to the rights to a
retail client would, by virtue of this provision, be subject to the full
licensing, conduct and disclosure requirements of Chapter 7. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 96]
5.8 The
rights are exempt from the disclosure requirements in Chapter 6D by virtue of
subsection 700(1). This ensures that the exemption from the prospectus
disclosure requirements which extends to the offer of securities under a rights
issue also applies to offers of the rights created as part of the rights
issue. [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 71]
Small scale offerings
5.9 This
measure amends the amount specified in subsection 709(4) that may be raised
under an Offer Information Statement from $5 million to $10 million. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 84]
5.10 It also
aligns the definition of sophisticated investor in section 708 in Chapter
6D with that in Chapter 7 by allowing the inclusion of the net assets and gross
income of a company or trust controlled by the investor in the total net assets
and gross income of the investor. As in Chapter 7, the concept is expanded to
include offers of securities to a company or trust controlled by a person who
satisfies the conditions for being classified as a sophisticated investor. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 75 and 76]
5.11 The
general definition of a professional investor in subsection 708(11) in
Chapter 6D of the Corporations Act is aligned with that used in Chapter 7 so
that it states that a person who has or controls gross assets of at least $10
million is a professional investor. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 77]
5.12 The
opportunity has been taken to correct a grammatical error in Note 1 to
subsection 709(4). [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 85]
Secondary sale issues
5.13 Section
707 in Chapter 6D of the Corporations Act provides that secondary sales of
securities by a controller must be accompanied by a disclosure document. The
provisions allowing certain secondary sale offers to be effected without
disclosure are not applicable to controllers (sections 708-708A).
5.14 This amendment
changes section 708A to allow controllers to benefit from the existing relief
from the requirement to issue a disclosure document for secondary sales of
existing securities subject to the same conditions. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 79]
5.15 The existing
relief from the disclosure requirements is (among others) subject to a
condition that the entity that issued the securities provides a notice known as
a cleansing notice to the market operator disclosing certain price-sensitive
information that has been withheld from the market. Withholding of such
information may be permitted under defined circumstances by the listing rules
issued by the market operator.
5.16 In the
case of secondary sales conducted by controllers, a requirement is imposed
through subparagraph 708A(5)(e)(ii) that both the controller as well as the
entity that issued the securities must provide a cleansing notice to the market
operator for release to the market. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 83]
5.17 The same
amendments are made to the relevant provisions in Part 7.9 to allow secondary
sales by controllers of other financial products, subject to the same condition
that both the controller as well as the entity that issued the financial
products must provide a cleansing notice to the market operator for release to
the market. In particular, subsection 1012DA(1A) is inserted and paragraph
1012DA(5) is amended. [Schedule 1, Part 1, items 138 and 142]
5.18 The
disclosure relief applying to certain secondary sales of existing securities is
subject to a requirement that the securities must have been quoted for a period
of 12 months. This period is reduced to 3 months by the amendment of
paragraph 708A(5)(a) as part of this measure. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 80]
5.19 Corresponding
relief from the disclosure requirements is also provided for certain secondary
sales of other quoted financial products such as interests in a managed
investment scheme. A similar amendment is made to paragraph 1012DA(5)(a)
reducing the required period of quotation from 12 to 3 months. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 139]
5.20 Offers of
continuously quoted securities enjoy substantial relief from the disclosure
requirements in Chapter 6D and Part 7.9 provided the financial products have
been quoted for at least 12 months. This period is reduced to 3 months through
an appropriate amendment to the definition of ‘continuously quoted securities’
in section 9 of the Corporations Act. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 1]
5.21 The
cleansing notice for secondary sales of securities can be provided at any time
before the sales offers are made, rather than on the day before the offers are
made. This is achieved by the amendment of paragraph 708A(5)(e). [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 83]
5.22 The
same amendment is made in relation to the timing of the release of a cleansing
notice for secondary sales of other financial products. This is achieved by
the amendment of paragraph 1012DA(5)(e). [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 142]
5.23 The
opportunity has been taken to make two minor corrections: to the definition of
‘regulated person’ in section 1011B and to paragraph 1012A(3)(c). [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 134 and 135]
Employee unlisted share schemes
5.24 A
definition of an eligible employee share scheme is inserted in section 9 of the
Corporations Act. All relief given under this measure only applies to employee
share schemes falling in this category. The main requirements are that a
disclosure document must be provided under the scheme, that offers are
restricted to employees as defined in the Corporations Act, and that the offers
are of fully paid shares and a limited number of other types of instruments.Â
This definition is largely modelled on the one in ASIC’s Class Order CO 03/184
which provides certain relief for employee share schemes of listed entities. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 4]
5.25 A
definition of a contribution plan is inserted in section 9. This includes
conditions which must apply to the features and operation of the plan in order
for it to qualify for the relief offered under this measure. Important
features include, for example, that the deductions made under the plan must be
authorised by the employee and may be discontinued at any time at the election
of the employee. [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 3]
5.26 Amounts
raised under an eligible employee share scheme are exempted from the
calculation of the total funds raised under an Offer Information Statement by
virtue of an amendment to subsection 709(5). [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 86]
5.27 Appropriate
licensing relief is provided for the company or controlled entity (for example
a trustee) operating the scheme through an amendment to subsection 911A(2).Â
This includes relief for the following activities: the provision of general advice
relating to the scheme; dealing in a financial product where the purchase or
disposal of the products occurs through a licensed broker in or outside
Australia; the operation of a custodial or depository service in connection
with the scheme; and dealing in an interest in a contribution plan. Providing
dealing relief where trading in the financial products occurs through a
licensed broker outside Australia is required to ensure that employees of
multinational companies can participate in schemes operated by the parent
entity outside Australia. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 106]
5.28 Relief is
provided from the hawking provisions in the Corporations Act in relation to
offers of securities as well as other financial products. This relief is
provided through the amendment of subsection 736(2), section 992A and
subsection 992AA(2). These provisions prevent sales offers from being made
through unsolicited meetings or telephone calls. Applied to employee share
schemes, these provisions could prevent companies from informing their
employees about their schemes and inviting them to participate. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 92, 131 and 132]
5.29 Contribution
plans are exempted from the operation of the managed investment scheme
requirements in Chapter 5C of the Corporations Act by virtue of an amendment to
the definition of ‘managed investment scheme’ in section 9. The requirements
of Chapter 5C would otherwise impose extensive regulatory requirements
which are not justified in the special circumstances under which such plans
operate. [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 6]
5.30 Contribution
plans are exempted from the operation of most of Part 7.9 of the Corporations
Act by virtue of new section 1010BA. Part 7.9 would otherwise require a
Product Disclosure Statement to be prepared. This is unnecessary in view of
the fact that the employee share scheme as a whole is required to be covered by
a disclosure document under the conditions attached to this measure. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 133]
Advertising rules for offers of securities requiring a disclosure document
and for offers of other financial products
5.31 The
provisions relating to advertising for offers of quoted securities under
Chapter 6D prior to lodgement of the disclosure document are amended to align
with those relating to advertising for offers or issues of other financial
products in Part 7.9. This is achieved by the amendment of paragraph
734(5)(a).
5.32 The
advertisement must include a statement regarding the following prescribed
matters: the identity of the issuer of the securities and the seller, if there
is one; that a disclosure document will be made available later, and when and
where it will be available; that a person should consider the disclosure
document in deciding whether to acquire the securities, and that anyone who
wants to acquire the securities must do so using the application form in the
disclosure document. [Schedule 1, Part 3, item 210]
5.33 Subsection
734(6) which relates to advertising of offers of quoted and unquoted securities
conducted under Chapter 6D after lodgement of the disclosure document is
amended in a similar fashion, taking account of the fact that the document has
already been lodged. Thus the prescribed statement must say that the
disclosure document is already available, and where it can be obtained. [Schedule 1, Part 3,
item 212]
5.34 The
measure ensures that ASIC’s stop-order powers in Chapter 6D extend to
defective advertisements for offers of quoted securities prior to lodgement of
the disclosure document as well as of quoted and unquoted securities after
lodgement of the disclosure document. This is achieved by the amendment of
section 739. [Schedule 1,
Part 3, item 213]
5.35 Further
provisions are included in section 739 to clarify the meaning of ‘defective’ in
the context of ASIC’s stop order power. The term ‘defective’ in this context
includes making a misleading or deceptive statement, omitting material that is
required, or making a statement about future matters without having reasonable
grounds for doing so. It is made clear that this is not intended to limit what
may constitute a misleading statement to these cases. [Schedule 1, Part 3,
item 215]
5.36 The
opportunity is taken to correct a minor formatting error in paragraph
734(5)(b). [Schedule
1, Part 3, item 211]
Stapled securities disclosure
5.37 A cross
reference to a definition of a Replacement Product Disclosure Statement is
included in section 761A (the definitions section) at the beginning of Chapter
7 of the Corporations Act. The new definition of this term is in section
1014H. [Schedule
1, Part 1, items 94 and 146]
5.38 The
measure inserts a new Subdivision DA in Division 2 of Part 7.9 of the
Corporations Act containing the main provisions relating to Replacement Product
Disclosure Statements. New section 1014G clarifies that Replacement Product
Disclosure Statements may only be issued for offers of stapled securities where
a Product Disclosure Statement has been lodged as well as a prospectus.
5.39 A
Replacement Product Disclosure Statement is defined in new section 1014H as a
document replacing a Product Disclosure Statement in order to make certain
corrections or fill certain gaps in the original Product Disclosure Statement.Â
Particular attention is drawn to the fact that a Replacement Product Disclosure
Statement may contain changes to important information supplied in the original
Product Disclosure Statement concerning minimum amounts that must be raised if
the financial product is to be issued or sold, or concerning plans to list the financial
products on a financial market.
5.40 A deeming
provision is included in the new section 1014 stating that a reference to a
Product Disclosure Statement throughout the Corporations Act is taken to be a
reference to the Replacement Product Disclosure Statement once the latter is
lodged. This ensures that all the relevant provisions in the Corporations Act
apply appropriately to Replacement Product Disclosure Statements, even where no
specific amendments have been made to achieve this.
5.41 A statement
that the document is a Replacement Product Disclosure Statement is required to
be placed at the beginning of the document. A requirement to identify the
original Product Disclosure Statement which is being replaced is included.Â
Otherwise the main provisions in the Corporations Act relating to the
preparation and contents of Product Disclosure Statements apply to Replacement
Product Disclosure Statements in the same way. These requirements are included
in new section 1014K.
5.42 The new
provisions import a number of further requirements dealing mainly with the
lodgement of certain Product Disclosure Statements with ASIC and the manner in
which a Product Disclosure Statement must be given to a person to ensure that
they also apply to Replacement Product Disclosure Statements. This is achieved
by new section 1014L. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 146]
5.43 Under
certain provisions in the Corporations Act, if a Product Disclosure Statement
states that a financial product will be tradable on a financial market, then
the product must be able to be traded, or else an application has to be made
within seven days after a certain relevant date to a market operator to enable
such trading to occur. Further, if the product is not able to be traded at the
end of three months after a certain relevant date, the issue or transfer of
such financial products is void, and the person to whom the products were
issued or transferred must be repaid if any payment has been received.
5.44 Subsection
1016D(3) is amended to clarify that, if such a statement is express or implied
in a Replacement Product Disclosure Statement, the relevant date is the date of
the Replacement Product Disclosure Statement, and not that of the original
Product Disclosure Statement. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 148]
5.45 Further
provisions prescribe certain actions applying to a person making an offer of
financial products under a Product Disclosure Statement that states that the
products will only be issued or sold if a minimum number of products are
applied for or a minimum amount is raised, and where these conditions have not
been fulfilled within 4 months after a certain relevant date.
5.46 Subsection
1016E(4) is amended to clarify that, if such a statement is express or implied
in the Replacement Product Disclosure Statement, the relevant date is the date
of the Replacement Product Disclosure Statement, and not that of the original
Product Disclosure Statement. In such cases the person making the offer must
either repay monies received from any applicants, or provide a new disclosure
document as prescribed and give any applicants one month to withdraw their
application and be repaid. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 150]
5.47 A minor
formatting error in subsection 1016D(3) is corrected. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 147]
Application and transitional provisions
Rights issue disclosure for quoted securities and other financial products
5.48 The
amendments relating to rights issues commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
5.49
The amendments abolishing the requirement for a prospectus or
Product Disclosure Statement for a rights issue will apply to rights issues
offered on or after the day on which the relevant items commence. [Schedule 1, Part 6,
item 229]
Small scale offerings
5.50 The
amendments relating to small scale offerings commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
5.51 The
amendments apply to offers of securities made on or after the day the
amendments commence. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 237]
Secondary sale issues
5.52 The
amendments relating to secondary sale issues commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
Employee unlisted share schemes
5.53 The
amendments relating to the contribution plans operated as part of employee
share schemes commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
5.54 The
amendments apply to employee share schemes offered on or after the day on which
the amendments commence and to contribution plans offered on or after the day
on which those amendments commence. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 227 and 228]
Advertising rules for offers of securities requiring a disclosure document
and for offers or issues of other financial products
5.55 The
amendments relating to advertising rules for offers of securities requiring a
disclosure document and for offers or issues of other financial products
commence on proclamation or six months after Royal Assent, whichever is
earlier. [Clause
2]
5.56 The
amendments apply to an advertisement or publication made after commencement. [Schedule 1, Part 6,
item 242]
Stapled securities disclosure
5.57 The
amendments relating to Replacement Product Disclosure Statements for stapled
securities commence on Royal Assent. [Clause 2]
5.58 The
amendments apply to any Product Disclosure Statement lodged with ASIC at the
time of commencement or thereafter. [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 230]
Consequential amendments
Rights issue disclosure for quoted securities and other financial products
5.59 A
reference to the new definition of ‘rights issues’ is inserted in the general
definitions section 9 at the beginning of the Corporations Act. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 9]
5.60 A number
of references to offers of securities that may be made without disclosure are
updated to include the new section removing the requirement for a disclosure
document for a rights issue. [Schedule 1, Part 1, items 20, 21, 72, 74, 89 and 136]
5.61 ASIC has
powers to exclude an offer of continuously quoted securities (and certain other
financial products) from the reduced disclosure requirements contained in
sections 713 and 1013 FA if that body has contravened certain provisions in the
Corporations Act. Failure to comply with key provisions applying to rights
issues conducted without disclosure are included in the list of contraventions
based on which ASIC may make such a determination. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 87, 88, 143 and 144]
5.62 Giving a
cleansing notice that does not comply with the new rights issues disclosure
provisions does not constitute a contravention of section 727 or section 1021C
which state that it is an offence to offer securities or other financial
products without providing appropriate disclosure as required by Chapter 6D or
Part 7.9. [Schedule
1, Part 1, items 90, 91, 152, 153 and 154]
5.63 Amendments
are made clarifying that certain enforcement provisions relating to offences,
such as a failure to provide a disclosure document or statement, or providing a
defective disclosure document or statement, apply to the new rights issue
provisions, and that the defendant bears the evidential burden in relation to
these provisions. [Schedule 1, Part 1, items 151, 155 and 159]
5.64 Amendments
are made ensuring that a failure to comply with the requirements applying to
the cleansing notice required for rights issues without disclosure constitutes
an offence under the relevant provisions of the Corporations Act. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 161, 162, 163, 164, 165 and 166]
5.65 Entities
breaching the continuous disclosure requirements may be subject to an
infringement notice issued by ASIC imposing a pecuniary penalty and requiring
certain compliance action to be taken. Failure to comply with the notice
provides an opportunity for specific proceedings to be taken against the
breaching entity. In such circumstances no other proceedings than those
specified may be started against the entity. It is clarified that a
determination by ASIC made under the new rights issues disclosure provisions
preventing an entity from benefiting from the relief provided may still be
made, even if other proceedings may not be started. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 167]
5.66 The
maximum penalty is specified for the offence of breaching the requirement to
correct a defective cleansing notice provided under the new rights issues
disclosure provisions. The penalty is the same as that for a failure to do the
same in relation to a secondary sale of securities without disclosure conducted
under the existing provisions in section 708A. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 172 and 175]
Small scale offerings
5.67 A
consequential amendment is made to the table at section 705 reflecting the
change in the amount that can be raised through an Offer Information
Statement. [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 73]
Secondary sale issues
5.68 Amendments
are made to reflect the reduced requirement for the securities and other financial
products subject to the secondary sales provisions to have been quoted for 3
months instead of 12 months. [Schedule 1, Part 1, items 2, 81, 82, 140 and 141]
Employee unlisted share schemes
5.69 The
definition of employee share schemes in section 9 is adapted to reflect the
possibility of schemes offering options over unissued shares as a consequence
of the definition of what constitutes an eligible employee share scheme. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 5]
Advertising rules for offers of securities requiring a disclosure document
and for offers of other financial products
5.70 An
amendment is required to make certain conditions and powers apply to ASIC’s
expanded stop order powers with respect to advertisements for offers under
Chapter 6D. These conditions relate to ASIC’s obligation to hold a hearing and
its power to make interim orders in certain circumstances. [Schedule 1, Part 3,
item 214]
Stapled securities disclosure
5.71 A number
of notes are inserted alerting readers to the operation of the new provisions
relating to Replacement Product Disclosure Statements. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 7, 93 and 145]
5.72 A
reference to the definition of Replacement Product Disclosure Statements in
Chapter 7 is placed in the general definitions in section 9 in the Corporations
Act. [Schedule
1, Part 1, item 8]
5.73 A
reference to the definition of a Replacement Product Disclosure Statement in
the new section 1014H is placed in the definitions section in Chapter 7. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 94]
5.74 The
appropriate operation of the continuous disclosure requirements in relation to
information that would have to be disclosed in a Replacement Product Disclosure
Statement is ensured through an appropriate amendment. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 70]
5.75 An
appropriate amendment ensures that certain remedies applying in cases of a
defective Product Disclosure Statement or Supplementary Product Disclosure
Statement also apply to a Replacement Product Disclosure Statement. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 149]
5.76 An
appropriate amendment ensures that certain enforcement provisions relating to
Product Disclosure Statements and Supplementary Product Disclosure Statements
that do not satisfy some of the contents provisions of the Corporations Act
also apply to Replacement Product Disclosure Statements. The provisions relate
to requirements such as that a Product Disclosure Statement must be dated,
carries an appropriate title as prescribed and is not combined with a Financial
Services Guide except as allowed under the Corporations Act. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
items 156, 157 and 158]
Outline of chapter
6.1 This
chapter describes amendments to repeal the provisions in the Corporations Act
which relate to telephone monitoring during takeover bids and the requirements
to provide section 665D and 665E notices (85 per cent notices).
Context of amendments
Remove telephone monitoring during takeover bids
6.2 Currently
a bidder and a target in a takeover situation must record all telephone calls
they make to security holders (other than wholesale holders) to discuss a
takeover bid during the bid period.
6.3 Subdivision
D, Division 5, Part 6.5 of the Corporations Act was introduced by the Financial
Services Reform Act 2001. It imposes obligations relating to the
identification, indexing, storing, destroying, accessing and copying of the
recordings.
6.4 The
purpose of the subdivision was to ensure that security holders did not receive
information from the takeover bidder or target that could be considered
misleading.
6.5 The
existing provisions have not increased the protection of security holders and
impose significant costs on the parties involved.
Remove section 665D and 665E notices (85 per cent notices)
6.6 Currently
section 665D of the Corporations Act requires those persons who hold 85 per
cent or more of a class of securities in a company to notify the company in
writing of that fact within 14 days of becoming aware that they are a 85 per
cent holder and then remind the company on an annual basis.
6.7 Section
665E requires a company that has been given a notice under section 665D to
inform its members the next time it sends its members a notice or report under
another provision of the Corporations Act.
6.8 The
provisions were enacted to provide holders of securities with an advanced
warning that the majority holder is approaching the 90 per cent limit, at
which the majority holder can compulsorily acquire their securities.
6.9 However,
it is often the case that the minority are already aware of the majority
holder’s position. For listed entities, other mechanisms in the Corporations
Act will mean that the information is already publicly disclosed.
6.10 Furthermore,
even if notice is given, it could be the case that a significant time has
lapsed between the majority holder providing the information to the company and
the issue of the company’s next notice or report.
6.11 These
provisions have proved to be of little benefit to minority holders but impose
significant costs on majority holders and companies.
Summary of new law
6.12 The Bill
will remove the requirement to monitor telephone calls during a takeover bid.Â
It will also remove the requirement to issue section 665D and 665E
notices.
Comparison of key features of new law and
current law
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No requirement to record telephone calls.
|
A bidder and a target in a takeover situation must record
all telephone calls they make to security holders (other than wholesale
holders) to discuss a takeover bid during the bid period.
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No requirements to issue 85 per cent notices.
|
Persons who hold 85 per cent or more of a class of
securities in a company must notify the company and the company must inform
its members of such a notice.
|
Detailed explanation of new law
6.1 Subdivision
D of Division 5 of Part 6.5 will be repealed. This will remove the requirement
for telephone monitoring during the takeover bid period. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 68]
6.2 Division
3 of Part 6A.2 of the Corporations Act will be repealed. This will remove the
requirement for holders of 85 per cent or more of a class of securities in a
company to notify the company. It will also remove the requirement for the
company to notify its members. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 69]
Application and transitional provisions
6.3 The
repeal of the telephone monitoring and 85 per cent notice requirements will
take effect on the day of Royal Assent.Â
Consequential amendments
6.4 The
penalty provisions related to telephone monitoring (Items 201A to 201M of
Schedule 3) will be removed from the Corporations Act. [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 170]
6.5 The
penalty provisions related to section 665D and 665E notices (Items 219 and 220
of Schedule 3) will be removed from the penalties schedule. Â [Schedule 1, Part 1,
item 171]
Please do not delete the following section break
Outline of chapter
7.1 This
chapter describes amendments to the Corporations Act to streamline compliance
procedures and ensure companies can access newer technologies, by simplifying
returns of company particulars and permitting electronic registration of
charges.
Context of amendments
7.2 The
amendments seek to address concerns that the current compliance framework can
stymie companies from using newer technologies and cause them to devote too
many resources to unproductive outputs.
7.3 The
amendments are based on proposals appearing in the Corporate and Financial
Services Review Proposals Paper of November 2006.
Summary of new law
7.4 The Bill
will make amendments to the Corporations Act to:
·
limit when ASIC can issue a return of particulars to instances
where it suspects or believes the particulars on the corporate register are not
correct, and give companies two months to respond; and
·
allow ASIC to register company charges electronically.
Comparison of key features of new law and
current law
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ASIC will provide a facility that allows for the
electronic registration of company charges.
|
Company charges can only be registered on paper forms.
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Detailed explanation of new law
7.1 Under the
current law, ASIC may give to a company or responsible entity of a registered
scheme a return of particulars for the company in three situations:Â if the
review fee for the company or scheme has not been paid by the due date; if ASIC
suspects or believes that particulars recorded in a register maintained by ASIC
are not correct; or if no documents have been lodged with ASIC for at least
one year.
7.2 In
addition, the response to the return of particulars must be lodged with ASIC
within 28 days of the date of issue of the return.
7.3 The
requirement to respond to a return of particulars for a company or scheme can
involve considerable compliance burden as the issuing of the return of
particulars cannot be anticipated by the company or scheme. Companies and
schemes also risk being penalised by late lodgment fees if the response is not
lodged within 28 days.
7.4 The
compliance burden on companies could be reduced by better targeting the
circumstances in which a return of particulars may be issued and allow for a
longer period to respond. The most appropriate circumstances for ASIC to issue
a return of particulars would be it if has reasonable grounds to suspect or
believe that particulars recorded in a register are not correct.
7.5 The Bill
will repeal existing subsection 348A(1) of the Corporations Act, substituting
it with a new subsection 348A(1) that allows ASIC to give a company or
responsible entity of a registered scheme a return of particulars for the
company or scheme if ASIC suspects or believes that particulars recorded in a
registered are not correct. [Schedule 1, Part 3, item 208]
7.6 In
addition, the Bill amends paragraph 348D(2)(a) of the Corporations Act,
increasing the time in which a return of particulars must be lodged with ASIC
from 28 days to two months. [Schedule 1, Part 3, item 209]
Electronic registration of company charges
7.7 From 1
July 2007, ASIC will provide a
facility that allows for the electronic registration of charges.Â
Currently, charges can only be lodged with, and certified by, ASIC on paper.
7.8 The Bill
will amend subsection 352(1) of the Corporations Act to allow ASIC to
approve the lodgement documents in a particular class by electronic means.Â
This will allow ASIC to establish a system for the electronic registration of
charges under which all documents in the class of documents related to charges
can be lodged with ASIC electronically. [Schedule 1,
Part 2, item 196]
7.9 As the
timing of the registration of charges is important for issues of priority, the
Bill will amend also section 274 of the Corporations Act to provide ASIC
with the ability to apply to the Court to have the register rectified in
circumstances where the electronic system to register the charges fails. This
power would allow ASIC to have the register reflect the order in which charges
were registered notwithstanding that the electronic system register was
unavailable for a period of time. [Schedule 1, Part
2, items 194 and 195]
7.10 In
relation to charge certificates, the Bill will remove the requirement in
subsections 272(1) and 272(3) of the Corporations Act for ASIC to
issue a certificate providing details of a charge under ASIC’s common seal,
that is, on paper. Removing this requirement will facilitate ASIC issuing
electronic certificates that provide details of a registered charge. This
amendment is not intended to remove the requirement for a charge certificate,
merely how it comes into existence. [Schedule 1, Part 2, items 191 and 193]
7.11 In
addition, to ensure consistency within the charge certificate provisions in the
Corporations Act, the Bill will amend subsection 272(3) to replace
‘register’ with ‘Register’, so that the provision expressly refers to the
Australian Register of Company Charges, to avoid any doubt. [Schedule 1, Part
2, item 192]
Application and transitional provisions
7.12 The
amendments providing a facility to allow for the electronic registration of
company charges will commence on 1 July 2007.
7.13 The
amendment in relation to circumstances when ASIC can issue a return of
particulars will commence on a date to be fixed by proclamation or otherwise
six months after Royal Assent, and will apply to returns of particulars issued
on or after commencement [Schedule 1, Part 6, item 241]
Consequential amendments
Electronic registration of company charges
7.14 Subparagraph
264(1)(a)(ii) of the Corporations Act contains an incorrect cross reference to
paragraph 263(1)(a) of the Corporations Act. The Bill will correct the
reference so that it refers to paragraph 263(1)(b) in relation to a company
issuing a series of debentures constituting a charge by resolution or
resolutions passed by the company. This amendment will commence on a date to
be fixed by proclamation or otherwise six months after Royal Assent. [Schedule 1, Part
3, item 207]
Please do not delete the following
7.1 The FSR
Act, which commenced on 11 March 2002, introduced a single licensing regime for
financial sales, advice and dealings in relation to financial products;
consistent and comparable financial product disclosure; and a single
authorisation procedure for financial markets and clearing and settlement
facilities. The FSR Act provided the legislative response to a number of
recommendations of the Financial System Inquiry, commissioned by the Australian
Government in 1997.
7.2 The
previous regulation of providers of financial services was product-specific and
contained in a number of different Acts and non‑legislative instruments.Â
The FSR Act removed unnecessary distinctions between financial products to
rationalise compliance obligations and put in place a competitively neutral
regulatory system. In addition, it aimed to give consumers a more consistent
framework of consumer protection in which to make their financial decisions.
7.3 The FSR
Act replaced the existing Chapters 7 and 8 of the Corporations Act with a new
Chapter 7. Following a two-year transition period, the changes introduced by
the FSR Act took full effect on 11 March 2004.
7.4 During
the transition to the new requirements, several issues were raised by industry
participants and consumer representatives in relation to the practical operation
of the legislation. Many of these issues were dealt with through the making of
Corporations Regulations and the passage of the Financial Services Reform
Amendment Act 2003.
7.5 However,
following the full implementation of the legislation, and after a reasonable
period in which to judge its impact, the Australian Government recognised that
concern remained about various aspects of the legislation. Chief among these
were aspects of the disclosure requirements.
Refinements to Financial Services Regulation
Refinements to financial services regulation proposals paper
7.6 In May
2005 the Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer, the Hon Chris Pearce MP,
released a paper titled Refinements to Financial Services Regulation
Proposals Paper. The purpose of the paper was to raise for discussion with
industry and consumer representatives a number of suggestions for refinements
to the legislation to improve its operation, particularly by reducing
compliance costs for industry participants, while preserving the consumer
protection benefits introduced by the FSR Act.
7.7 The paper
complemented a report by the Financial Sector Advisory Council which included
recommendations based on the results of a survey of industry experience with
financial services regulation since its introduction.
7.8 The
intention of the financial services regulation refinements was to:
·
ensure that consumers receive information that is relevant to
their needs;
·
reduce the compliance burden on industry; and
·
clarify the intent of the legislative and regulatory framework
that applies to the financial services industry.
7.9 Around 40
submissions were received in response to the paper. In addition, the
Australian Government held a number of consultation meetings to further discuss
the refinement proposals. By December 2005, the refinements were
completed, with 18 refinements being implemented by amendments to Corporations
Regulations and the remaining seven proposals implemented by ASIC.
7.10 As part
of the consultation on the 2005 refinements to financial services regulation,
industry provided comments on a number of residual issues which extended beyond
the scope of the proposals considered in the Refinements to Financial
Services Regulation Proposals Paper. These residual issues were not able
to be addressed as part of the refinements project, but the feedback from
industry has emphasised the need for further refinements in outstanding areas
of concern. These issues were included for discussion in the Corporate and
Financial Services Regulation Review Consultation Paper of April 2006.
Corporate and Financial Services Regulation Review Consultation Paper
7.11 On
7 April 2006, the Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer, the Hon
Chris Pearce MP, released the Corporate and Financial Services Regulation
Review Consultation Paper for a six-week consultation period, which ended on
19 May 2006. The consultation paper sought comments from consumer
and industry representatives on ideas for improving aspects of corporate and
financial services regulation.
7.12 The
release of the consultation paper coincided with the release of the Government
response to the Rethinking Regulation report of the Taskforce on
Reducing the Regulatory Burden on Business, which recommended that the
Australian Government establish a further process to enable additional
refinements to be made to the operation of the financial services regulatory
regime in outstanding areas of concern. These outstanding areas of concern
include those which were raised as part of the 2005 refinements, as well as
further representations that have been made to Treasury and the Parliamentary
Secretary to the Treasurer by industry.
7.13 The
consultation paper raised 56 topics in relation to financial services regulation
and regulation in relation to company reporting obligations, auditor
independence, corporate governance, fundraising, takeovers, collective
investments and dealing with regulators. Generally, the paper sought comments
on whether there was a need to simplify and/or improve aspects of regulation in
these areas.
7.14 Over 80
submissions were received from a range of industry and consumer
representatives, including industry organisations and individual firms and
practitioners. The Business Regulation Advisory Group met on 9 June 2006 to
consider the submissions and provide views on the issues to the Parliamentary
Secretary.
7.15 On
14 August 2006, the Parliamentary Secretary announced the intended
way forward on the consultation issues, which principally included further
consultation on defined proposals. Some of the more straightforward financial
services regulation issues will be progressed through draft regulations, which
will also be released for public consultation. The draft regulations were
released for consultation on 23 March 2007.
Corporate and Financial Services Regulation Review Proposals Paper
7.16 On
16 November 2006, the Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer
released the Corporate and Financial Services Regulation Review Proposals
Paper to seek comments from stakeholders on 35 defined proposals,
which take into account the comments made in submissions on the Consultation
Paper.
7.17 Over 100
submissions were received in response to the paper. Overall, the reaction to
the proposals was substantially positive, with many submissions expressing
appreciation for the Australian Government’s work to improve the effectiveness
of the regulatory regime and the consultative manner in which this has been
undertaken.
7.18 This
Regulation Impact Statement (RIS) considers the options available to implement
two significant proposals contained in the Corporate and Financial Services
Regulation Review Proposals Paper in relation to the financial services
regulation issues.
7.19 The
financial services regulation proposals from the proposals paper to which this
RIS refers are:
Proposal 1.3 Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Scope of
financial services advice — threshold for requiring a Statement of Advice
Proposal 1.9Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Product activity
and data collection
7.20 In some
cases, these proposals share common issues, objectives, consultation methods,
implementation and review, and where possible, these themes are addressed as a
whole. However, the RIS also contains an individual assessment of the problem,
desired objectives, options, impact assessment and recommended option for each
proposal.
7.21 The
options examined in Part 4 below take into account comments from consumer and
industry representatives in response to the consultation processes outlined
above, as well as feedback that has been provided by these groups through
informal liaison and from the regulator (ASIC) with Treasury and the
Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer.
7.22 The
regulation of financial services is directed at market integrity and consumer
protection. The submissions received in response to the two consultations
undertaken as part of the Corporate and Financial Services Regulation Review
and representations with various other stakeholders have raised problems with
regard to the operation of financial services regulation in practice, beyond
those which were addressed as part of the Refinements to Financial Services
Regulation project. In the area of financial advice, for example, these
problems relate to inefficiencies caused by information asymmetry, arising in
part from cost and access.
7.23 The
financial services regulatory framework is founded on the principle that
consumers must take responsibility for their own investment decisions and that,
in order to do so, consumers must be given adequate information on which to
base their decisions. However, there are some instances where the regulation
of financial services inhibits the appropriate flow of information or the
provision of services.
7.24 Some
industry representatives have suggested that the cost of complying with some
aspects of the financial services regulatory regime is too onerous such that it
is not economically viable for some advisers to provide advice to clients who
have a relatively small amount to invest or are only interested in a particular
type of relatively simple financial product. Alternatively, some financial
product issuers who are not authorised to provide personal advice are unable to
provide useful information on products to clients where that advice would
constitute personal advice. Both scenarios have potential to result in a
reduction in accessibility and/or affordability of financial advice for
consumers. This RIS examines a measure to reduce the cost and increase
affordability of advice in relation to small scale investments.
7.25 Other
issues with regard to the operation of financial services regulation in
practice relate to the requirements of financial product issuers to report
certain matters to the regulator, the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission (ASIC). This RIS examines a measure to improve an aspect of
reporting with regulators and improve the usefulness of that information in
regulatory activities.
7.26 Section 4
provides more specific problems and analysis on the individual proposals.
7.27 Broadly,
the intention of refining financial services regulation is to ensure that the
framework is operating as the policy intended it to, that is, to ensure a
competitively neutral regulatory system by providing uniform regulation,
reducing administrative and compliance costs, and removing unnecessary
distinctions between products. In addition, the framework was intended to
facilitate innovation and promote business while ensuring adequate levels of
consumer protection and market integrity.
7.28 The
objective of reducing compliance costs for business without diminishing consumer
protection is consistent with the Government’s response to the recommendations
by the Taskforce on Reducing the Regulatory Burden on Business to further
refine the operation of the financial services regulatory framework.
7.29 The
objective of refining other aspects of the financial services regulatory
framework is to improve the efficiency and effectiveness with which ASIC is
able to undertake its role of monitoring and enforcing financial service
providers’ compliance with financial services regulation requirements.
Identification of options, impact analysis, conclusions and recommendations
Impact assessment methodology
7.30 Impacts
are divided between three impact groups (consumers, business and government).Â
Typical impacts of an option on consumers might be changes in access to a
market, the level of information and disclosure provided, or prices of goods or
services. Typical impacts of an option on business would be the changes in the
costs of compliance with a regulatory requirement. Typical impacts on
government might be the costs of administering a regulatory requirement. Some
impacts, such as changes in overall confidence in a market, may impact on more
than one impact group.
7.31 The
assessment of impacts in this draft regulation statement is based on a
seven-point scale (‑3 to +3). The impacts of each option are compared
with the equivalent impact of the ‘do nothing’ option. If an impact on the
impact group would, relative to doing nothing, be beneficial, the impact is
allocated a positive rating of +1 to +3, depending on the magnitude of the
relative benefit. On the other hand, if the impact imposes an additional cost
on the impact group relative to the status quo, the impact is allocated a
negative rating of -1 to -3, depending on the magnitude of the relative cost.Â
If the impact is the same as that imposed under the current situation, a zero
score would be given (although usually the impact would not be listed in such a
case).
7.32 The
magnitude of the rating of a particular impact associated with an option has
been assigned taking into account the overall potential impact on the impact
group. The reference point is always the status quo (or ‘do nothing’ option).Â
Whether the cost or benefit is one-off or recurring, and whether it would fall
on a small or large proportion of the impact group (in the case of business and
consumers), is factored into the rating. For example, a cost or benefit, even
though large for the persons concerned, may not result in the maximum rating
(+/-3) if it is a one-off event that only falls on a few individuals.Â
Conversely, a small increase in costs or benefits might be given a moderate or
high rating if it would be likely to recur or if it falls on a large proportion
of the impact group. The rating scale for individual impacts is explained in
the table below.
Rating
an individual impact
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+3
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+2
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+1
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0
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-1
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-2
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-3
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Large benefit/
advantage compared to ‘do nothing’
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Moderate benefit/
advantage compared to ‘do nothing’
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Small benefit/
advantage compared to ‘do nothing’
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No substantial change from ‘do nothing’
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Small cost/
disadvantage compared to ‘do nothing’
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Moderate cost/
disadvantage compared to ‘do nothing’
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Large cost/
disadvantage compared to ‘do nothing’
|
7.1 The
ratings for the individual impacts compared to the status quo are then tallied
to produce an overall outcome for the option. If it is positive, it indicates
that the option is likely to produce a more favourable cost/benefit ratio than
the status quo. If it is zero there would be no overall benefit from adopting
the option, and if negative the option would provide overall a less favourable
cost/benefit ratio than the ‘do nothing’ option. Ordinarily, options that have
the highest positive score would be the favoured courses of action.
7.2 What is
classed as a ‘large’, ‘moderate’ or ‘small’ cost or benefit depends on the
nature of the problem and options being considered. Of course, the costs and
benefits associated with options to address a problem costing billions of
dollars per year are likely to be of a much greater absolute magnitude than the
costs and benefits of options for dealing with a rather modest issue that
affects only a handful of persons. However, as all the ratings are made
relative to the status quo/ do nothing option for a particular problem, the
absolute value of ‘large’ or ‘moderate’ or ‘small’ is not really important.Â
All that matters is that within a problem assessment, the impacts of each
option are given appropriate ratings relative to the status quo and each
other. If that occurs, it will be sufficient for the methodology to yield an
overall rating that assists in assessing the relative merits of options, from a
cost/benefit perspective, to address the particular problem.
7.3 An
example of the rating calculation for an option, using the seven‑point
scale ratings of impacts, is in the table below. The example is based on a
purely hypothetical scenario that a new type of long-wearing vehicle tyre is
being sold and marketed, but it has become apparent that the new tyres have a
higher risk of exploding while in motion than conventional tyres. The example
is designed merely to illustrate how the rating scale might be used to compare
a proposal’s costs and benefits option to the ‘do nothing’ option — it is not
intended to be a comprehensive or realistic assessment of options to address
such a problem.
Illustrative
rating for the problem of a long-wearing tyre that may fail
Option A:Â Do nothing
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Benefits
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Costs
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Consumers
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Access to a cheaper solution for vehicle tyres
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Risk of tyre failure that can result in personal and
property damage as a result of collision. Damage can be severe but cases are
rare.
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Industry
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Some compensation payments to persons as a result of
collisions caused by the tyre
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Government
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Advantages from a waste management perspective
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Option B:Â Ban on sale of the new tyre
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Benefits
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Costs
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Consumers
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No persons will not be affected by tyre failure and
resultant damage (+3)
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Lack of access by all consumers to long-wearing
vehicle tyres, increasing the cost of vehicle maintenance (-2)
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Industry
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No compensation payments for accident victims (+1)
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Transitional costs involved with switching back all
manufacturing/marketing operations to conventional tyres (-3)
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Government
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Conventional tyres produce more waste which is costly
to deal with (-1)
|
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Sub-rating
|
+4
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-6
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Overall rating
|
-2
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Option C:Â Industry-developed quality control standards
|
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Benefits
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Costs
|
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Consumers
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Much lower risk of tyre failure and resultant damage
than status quo (+2)
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Industry
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Significantly less compensation payments for accident
victims (+1)
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Developing and monitoring industry-wide quality
control standards (-2)
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Government
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Sub-rating
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+3
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-2
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Overall rating
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+1
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7.1 In the
above hypothetical example, Option C appears to have a better impact for
consumers and a better overall cost/benefit rating than Option B. Although
Option B appears to offer a slightly better impact for consumers, it appears to
be less effective from an overall cost/benefit perspective than Option C.
Problem
Situation
7.2 The
definition of personal advice captures situations where a financial service
provider uses personal information and product information to make a
recommendation to a retail client. The personal advice definition is triggered
if a financial service provider knows a client’s objectives, financial
situation or needs and considers that information in recommending or selling a
product. In these circumstances, a Statement of Advice (SOA) is required to be
provided to the client.
7.3 An SOA is
provided by a financial adviser when they provide personal advice to a client.Â
The SOA sets out:
·
the advice they have given;
·
the information on which it is based;
·
how the adviser is paid (including commissions); and
·
any interests, associations or relationships that could influence
them.
Problem
7.4 There is
evidence that the cost of producing an SOA is not economic for an adviser where
a client is seeking a minor piece of advice and/or has a relatively small
amount of money to invest. Many advisers are choosing not to provide personal
advice to such clients, with the result that in these circumstances small scale
consumers may not be able to access advice that may benefit them.
7.5 Some industry
participants have submitted that in some cases, the cost of producing an SOA is
not economical for an adviser where a client is seeking a minor piece of advice
and/or has a relatively small amount of money to invest. Many advisers are
choosing not to provide personal advice to such clients, with the result that
often they cannot access advice that may benefit them.
7.6 For
instance, industry has indicated that the cost of preparing an SOA is
approximately $260[2]
on average. For a financial planner to at least recover this cost when providing
personal advice to clients, they would need to either charge the client a fee
of $260, or receive a commission of $260 from the sale of a financial product
as a result of the financial advice provided. If a financial adviser decides
to charge an up‑front fee for providing advice, it is likely that a $260
fee would inhibit many smaller-scale investors from seeking such advice.
7.7 Alternatively,
if a financial adviser used a commission-based structure for remuneration, in
order to break even, they would need to receive a commission of $260. Given
that financial adviser commission rates generally range from one to
two per cent. Based on a commission of one per cent of the
amount invested, the cost of preparing the SOA would be recovered if the
investment amount to which the advice related was $26,000. Based on a
commission of two per cent of the amount invested, the cost of
preparing the SOA would be recovered if the investment amount to which the
advice related was $13,000.
7.8 Therefore,
it is unlikely that a financial adviser that receives remuneration through a
commission payment structure would be willing to provide financial advice to
small scale investors where they are unable to recover the cost of providing
the SOA.
Objective
7.9 The
policy objective is to encourage the provision of financial advice by advisers
and facilitate access to advice for consumers, while maintaining important
consumer protections, such as ensuring that advice is appropriate and
documented and that documentation is accessible.
7.10 Appropriate
reduction of the costs of providing advice may encourage the provision of small
scale advice by advisers and improve access to advice for consumers currently
excluded from the advice market.
Options
Option A: No action
7.11 Maintain the
existing requirements to provide an SOA in all situations where personal advice
is provided (except where exemptions apply).
Option
B: Subjective proportionate threshold for the provision of a Statement of
Advice
7.12 Introduce
a threshold which determines when an SOA is required to be provided that is
proportionate to the client’s gross annual income. A threshold of
10 per cent could be introduced, whereby an adviser would not need to
provide the client with an SOA if the investment amount to which the advice
related was lower than 10 per cent of the client’s gross annual
income. Information on a client’s income would generally be obtained through
consultations with the client regarding their financial situation. For advice
relating to amounts less than 10 per cent of a client’s gross annual
income, an adviser would be required to keep a Record of Advice (ROA).
7.13 For
example, an investor with an average annual income of $42,000[3], an SOA would need to be prepared
and provided to a client for an investment amount greater than $4,200.
7.14 In
contrast to an SOA, an ROA allows advisers to document further advice to
clients with brevity. Prior to the introduction of an ROA, all advice was
required to be documented in an SOA. The ROA sets out the advice given to the
client or brief particulars of the recommendations made to the client including
the basis on which the recommendations were made. It also has to contain
information about the consequences of partially or wholly replacing one
financial product with another, where such advice is provided.
7.15 An ROA is
currently used in the circumstance where initial advice has been provided by
the adviser in an SOA and where the client’s relevant personal circumstances
have not changed significantly since the giving of the prior advice. In these
circumstances, an ROA is provided to the client upon their request, not as a
matter of course. This option proposes allowing an ROA to be provided for
initial advice (where the threshold is met) and requiring it to be provided to
the client.
Option C: Objective dollar threshold
for the provision of a Statement of Advice
7.16 Introduce
a threshold into the SOA requirements, such that a full SOA would only be
required if the advice given is in relation to an investment amount that is
above a certain monetary threshold. For simplicity, a threshold of $15,000 is
proposed which relates to a level that should make the threshold commercially
useful without inappropriately undermining consumer protection. This would
mean that an SOA would be required to be prepared and provided to a client if
the amount to which the advice relates is $15,000 or more. For advice relating
to amounts less than $15,000, it is proposed to require the adviser to provide
an ROA to the client. The threshold will be reviewable as appropriate.
7.17 Given
that superannuation holdings generally involve a significant accumulated
investment or potential accumulated investment, and advice in relation to
superannuation can have a potentially significant impact on consumers’
financial situation, it is proposed to limit the application of this option in
relation to superannuation, to the following circumstances. Where that advice
is to consolidate or supplement superannuation into an existing fund the SOA
exemption may be relied on. Where this occurs, the ROA must contain the
section 947D disclosure requirements contained in the Corporations Act. These
disclosures relate primarily to charges and pecuniary interests relevant to the
client. Where the advice relates to the consolidation or supplementation of
superannuation in relation to an investment amount of $15,000, the proposal
will extend to the consideration of the life risk insurance where it is
packaged with the superannuation interest in order to reasonably make
recommendations regarding superannuation taking into consideration all the
features of the relevant superannuation products.
7.18 The
existing SOA arrangements that apply to general insurance products (including
in relation to sickness and accident and consumer credit insurance) would not
be altered by this proposal. General insurance products (other than sickness
and accident and consumer credit insurance) have previously been granted an
exemption from the provision of an SOA..
7.19 It is not
proposed that the threshold apply to advice in relation to life risk insurance
products (other than as discussed above) and derivatives for reasons including
the following:
·
The difficulty in determining how a threshold would appropriately
be applied to these products. For example, if the threshold was to be applied
to the premium, it is likely that the threshold would always apply, and if the
threshold was to apply to the amount insured, it is not likely that the SOA
exemption would be able to be used as the amount would always be above the threshold.
·
There is potential for advice in relation to these products to
have a significant impact on a consumer’s overall investment and/or risk
coverage.
·
The complexity of these products which often means that they are
not easily or commonly understood.
7.20 The
proposal would not alter the need for the advice to be appropriate or for the
adviser to be appropriately trained to provide personal advice.
Impact analysis
Impact group identification
7.21 Groups
that will be affected by the proposed amendments are:
·
financial service providers involved in the provision of
personal advice;
·
consumers of personal advice; and
·
government and regulators.
Assessment of costs and benefits
Option A:Â No action
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
Consumers would receive a full SOA for advice, where
they are able to access advice, which may reduce the potential for consumers
to make inappropriate investment decisions.
|
The ability for small-scale investors to access and
afford financial advice would be limited because advisers would continue to
be reluctant to provide advice where it is not economical to do so.
|
|
Industry
|
|
Where advisers provide advice in relation to
relatively small investments, they would continue to bear the relatively high
costs of providing personal advice to clients with limited ability to recover
costs.
|
|
Government
|
ASIC would be able to access documented SOAs provided
to clients to monitor compliance with the law.
|
|
Option B:Â Subjective proportionate threshold for the provision of a
Statement of Advice
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
Increased access to advice for consumers where
advisers are more willing to provide advice because it is economically viable
as a result of reduced costs. [3]
|
In many situations where advice is provided to small‑scale
investors that are average income earners, it would still not be economical
for an adviser to prepare an SOA for a client. Therefore, consumers would
still not be able to access advice in some situations.
In the example of an average income of $42,000, an
adviser would be required to provide an SOA for advice in relation to an
investment amount of $4,200. Based on a commission of
two per cent, the adviser would only be able to recover $84,
despite incurring a cost of approximately $260 for preparing the SOA. [-3]
|
|
|
|
A reduction in the disclosure that is provided to
consumers in an SOA where the investment amount is less than
10 per cent of the client’s gross annual income.
Without documented advice, there is a risk that
consumers could make inappropriate investment decisions. However, an ROA
would need to be kept by the adviser, which the client would be able to
request if they wished. [-2]
|
|
Industry
|
While this proposal would not reduce all costs
associated with providing advice, it would reduce some costs of providing
advice to smaller-scale investors. A lengthy SOA would be costly for
advisers to produce relative to the investment amount in many cases. This
option would reduce this cost. [2]
|
There would be added complexity for advisers, and less
certainty for consumers, in regard to determining whether an SOA is required
to be provided. [-2]
|
|
|
|
Costs for the adviser associated with preparing a
Record of Advice. [-1]
|
|
Government
|
While ASIC would not be able to access documented SOAs
provided to clients to monitor compliance with the law, it would be able to
monitor Records of Advice. [2]
|
The full extent of the SOA would not be available for
assessment and enforcement by ASIC. Compliance by ASIC will be based on
monitoring of ROAs. [-1]
|
|
Sub-rating
|
7
|
-9
|
|
Overall rating
|
-2
|
Option C:Â Objective dollar threshold for the provision of a Statement of
Advice
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
Increased access to advice for consumers where
advisers are more willing to provide advice to small-scale investors (that
is, for advice in relation to investment amounts less than $15,000) because
it is economically viable as a result of reduced costs. [3]
|
A reduction in the disclosure that is provided to
consumers in an SOA where the investment amount is less than $15,000.Â
Without documented advice, there is a risk that consumers could make
inappropriate investment decisions. However, a Record of Advice would need
to be kept by the adviser and provided to the client. Further, additional
disclosures will be required for advice in relation to superannuation. [-2]
|
|
Industry
|
While this proposal would not reduce all costs
associated with providing advice, it would go a significant way towards reducing
the costs of providing advice to small-scale investors. A lengthy SOA would
be costly for advisers to produce relative to the investment amount in many
cases. This option would reduce this cost. [2]
|
Costs for the adviser associated with preparing a
Record of Advice and the additional disclosures for superannuation. [-1]
|
|
|
From a compliance perspective, the threshold would be
a relatively simple indication for advisers to determine whether a SOA is
required to be provided. [2]
|
|
|
Government
|
While ASIC would not be able to access documented SOAs
provided to clients to monitor compliance with the law, it would be able to
monitor Records of Advice. [3]
|
The full extent of the SOA would not be available for
assessment and enforcement by ASIC. Compliance by ASIC will be based on
monitoring of ROAs. [-1]
|
|
Sub-rating
|
10
|
-4
|
|
Overall rating
|
6
|
Business Cost Calculator
7.1 This
section presents the results of the analysis of the cost impact on business of
the various options.
7.2 All
options assumed the following: 3000 businesses were affected by this proposal
based on the number of licensees authorised to give personal advice;
approximately 720,000 SOAs are produced per annum; the cost of producing an SOA
is $260 (as stated earlier) and approximately 5 per cent of those
SOAs are provided for advice in relation to investments of less than $15,000.Â
Further it was assumed that the variable costs in relation to this proposal
related to the documentation time of an SOA or an ROA, and that the
research and preparatory times were fixed. On this basis, it was assumed that
the documentation time (and therefore cost) for producing an ROA was
approximately half that of an SOA.
7.3 The
analysis results in the following costs for each option:
|
Option
|
Cost per business
|
Total cost
|
|
Option A
|
$3,120
|
$9,360,000
|
|
Option B
|
$2,470
|
$7,410,000
|
|
Option C
|
$2,275
|
$6,825,000
|
7.1 Against
the benchmark of the current regulatory requirement (Option A) to provide an
SOA in all circumstances where personal advice is provided, Options B and C
both reduced the cost of disclosure for the provision of advice in relation to
the population group (that is, advice in relation to investments of less than
$15,000). The industry wide cost of Option B is slightly greater than that of
Option C due in part to the complexity of determining the threshold under this
Option B. In addition, Option B would open up the provision of high value
advice without SOA documentation where the client has higher gross annual
income. In conclusion, Option C resulted in the greatest cost saving, is less
complex to administer and provides consumer safeguards in relation to the cap
of the value of advice documented by an ROA and the limitations in relation to
superannuation advice.
Consultation
Summary
of comments
7.2 Submissions
to the Corporate and Financial Services Regulation Review Proposals Paper
outlined the following views of the proposal.
7.3 Industry
was generally in support of the proposal in principle and the aims it was
seeking to achieve. A general dollar threshold was considered a sound approach
as it was easy to apply in all situations and provided meaningful relief to
advisers and therefore would contribute significantly to expanding access to
robust financial advice.
7.4 Some
submissions considered that it is often the clients holding smaller account
balances who require the protection offered by an SOA. However, currently it
is these clients who are unable to access advice at all, either because an
adviser does not consider it worthwhile to provide advice, or because the
client is unable to afford the fee charged by the adviser.
7.5 Some
submissions noted that a threshold would enable advisers to provide personal
advice to clients on a more commercially-viable basis. There were variations
in what was considered to be an appropriate threshold. Industry considered the
level of the threshold to be too low (when set at $10,000) and as such not
broadly applicable or valuable, therefore $15,000 was considered a reasonable
threshold.
7.6 Further
comments on the proposal were:
·
The exclusion of superannuation and life risk insurance from the
threshold was considered to skew advice away from superannuation, create
operational difficulties in managing super and non-super clients; and
exacerbate the perceived underinsurance of Australian lives;
·
The application of the threshold to future or regular
contributions without a sunset period would mean the threshold would rarely
apply, as most investments to which future or regular contributions were made
would at some point reach the threshold;
·
The ongoing relevance of the threshold if it were not
appropriately indexed;
·
The appropriateness of still requiring the ROA as a disclosure
option, given it still imposes burden on the planner and therefore should be
modified;
·
The value of the proposal is limited if it is applied only to
initial investments, given the minimum investment requirements attached to most
products. The proposed threshold should apply irrespective of an existing
balance the client might have.
7.7 Consumer
groups argued that there was insufficient evidence to suggest that the proposal
will in fact expand the availability of personal advice. As discussed above
however, it is currently these clients who are unable to access advice at all,
and industry has indicated that they supportive of the option which should lead
to be an increase in the provision of small scale investment advice.
7.8 In
addition, consumer groups argued that there lacked evidence to suggest that
advice will be of sufficient quality to assist the consumer and that it will
not be conflicted advice associated with a product recommendation. They
considered that consumers with relatively small amounts to invest are most
vulnerable, lack investment experience and financial literacy, and will not be
given an adequate level of disclosure.
7.9 They were
concerned that investment products will be sold as a series of parcels in order
to avoid the SOA. It is proposed to apply a sunset clause to the value of the
advice so that where the advice commits the client to regular or future investments,
the threshold will relate to the value that the initial investment and the
future amounts anticipated to be reached in the next 12 months. Further, it is
proposed to introduce an anti-avoidance mechanism aimed at ensuring it is not
possible to carve up an investment amount into parcels less than $15,000 in
order to be providing advice on an investment less than $15,000 and therefore
avoid the requirement to produce an SOA. This mechanism will take the form of
an anti-avoidance provision that will provide for civil or criminal action for
a breach of s 946A (the requirement to give a Statement of Advice) of the
Corporations Act.
7.10 Further,
consumer groups raised concerns that the removal of the SOA for investments
allowed for advice to be provided without adequate consumer protection. They
argue that a ROA is not sufficient to provide ASIC with the ability to examine
the appropriateness of that advice. It was considered to limit the ability of
internal and external dispute resolution schemes to review and resolve problems
between the consumer and licensee.
7.11 The
option includes a number of safeguards designed to address these concerns to
the extent possible such as the requirement to provide the ROA to the client
rather than upon their request. The ROA is then available for dispute
resolution purposes.
7.12 While
more supportive of the proposal, the superannuation industry groups supported
the consumer views that superannuation should be excluded from the threshold.Â
However, the exclusion of superannuation would to some extent create unintended
outcomes such as advice skewed away from superannuation and additional cost to
business in establishing dual mechanisms for superannuation and non‑superannuation
activities.
Conclusion and recommended option
7.13 The
problem to be addressed is that consumers that wish to obtain financial advice
in relation to a relatively small investment amount are unable to access or
afford financial advice due to the relatively high costs of advice.
7.14 Option A
is not preferred as it would not reduce the costs associated with preparing
SOAs for advice in relation to relatively small investment amounts.
7.15 Options B
and C would reduce the costs associated with preparing SOAs in relation to
advice on relatively small investment amounts while still ensuring that records
of advice are kept.
7.16 Consultations
have highlighted the difficulty in determining what might be an appropriate
threshold above which an SOA would be required. Consideration was given to the
relative significance of an investment amount and the relative simplicity of
complying with a threshold. Option B would apply a scale of significance
relative to annual income, which may not be an appropriate measure for at least
two reasons. Firstly, this may not improve access to advice for lower income
earners as an SOA would be required to be prepared well below the adviser’s
break-even point of recovering the cost of preparing the SOA. Secondly, high
income earners would not receive an SOA if the investment amount was less than
10 per cent of their wage, even if the amount would generally be
considered to be substantial. For example, a client with an annual income of
$200,000 would not receive an SOA for advice in relation to an investment
amount of $19,000, even though this amount might be considered to be
substantial and it is likely that the adviser would be able to at least recover
the cost of preparing the SOA through remuneration.
7.17 Option B
would also introduce a movable and subjective threshold that would be difficult
for the adviser and consumer to determine, and would be difficult for the
regulator to monitor compliance.
7.18 While
Option C creates a threshold of what is considered to be ‘significant’, it is
linked to the point at which it becomes commercially viable for an adviser
provide advice, based on recovering the cost of preparing an SOA. An objective
threshold test would also be relatively simple to comply with and administer.
7.19 Option C
is the preferred option as it would reduce the costs for advisers in providing
advice for relatively small-scale investors and as a consequence, would
increase consumers’ access to affordable financial advice. Consumer protection
would be maintained through the requirement to provide an SOA for advice above
the threshold and the requirement to provide a Record of Advice below the
threshold.
Problem
Situation
7.20 A Product
Disclosure Statement (PDS) contains key information regarding a financial
product offered to investors. For most classes of financial product, section
1015D of the Corporations Act requires the product issuer to lodge an ‘in use’
notice with ASIC within five business days of the first use of the PDS. The
requirement ensures ASIC is aware of all products being promoted in the market.
Problem
7.21 Currently
notices are provided to ASIC in hardcopy on a downloadable form (FS53) from the
ASIC website. ASIC received approximately 12,000 such notices in 2005. Some
submissions calculated the cost to industry of lodging in‑use notices.Â
With approximately 12,000 notices issued in 2004 each attracting a $33 lodgment
fee, this equates to $396 000 for lodgment alone. While there is a
relatively small cost for lodging an ‘in-use’ notice with ASIC, for large
businesses when multiplied across the wide range of PDSs prepared by banks and
the competitive positioning of interest rates, the cost of lodging fresh
‘in-use’ notices with ASIC can be significant.
7.22 Once
received by ASIC, the notice has limited regulatory use because the data does
not provide any means for informing ASIC when a PDS is out of date and/or when
a product is withdrawn from the market other than receipt of a new notice which
assumes it replaces the prior notice.
7.23 Business
considers the preparation of the in-use notice to be time-consuming and
repetitive as often the change is simply a new date of issue or new fee
information. All questions, such as those relating to the complaints
mechanism, contact person and so forth, must still be completed each time a
form is lodged even when there has been no change. The current mechanism is
not sufficiently flexible to address a range of varying circumstances as it is
a one-size-fits-all document with many items relevant only to superannuation.
7.24 Further,
where the change is one relating to a change in broader circumstances such as
an interest rate change, a change in the monetary amount of an already
applicable fee or government tax or, in the case of pensioner deeming accounts,
a change in the deeming interest rate (which can be made at any time by the
responsible Minister), business is required to revise its PDSs and lodge a new
‘in-use’ notice to reflect these changes for circumstances beyond their control
using a mechanism that they consider is time consuming, inefficient and
potentially costly.
Objective
The policy
objectives are to:
·
ensure ASIC is aware of all product information that it requires
to be useful;
·
minimise cost to business in providing the information; and
·
enhance protection of consumers by ensuring ASIC has regulatory oversight
of all financial products able to be sold to investors.
Options
Option A: No action
7.25 Continue
with the current arrangements whereby hard copy in-use notices are provided to
ASIC.
Option B: Remove all legislative
requirements to report Product Disclosure Statements to ASIC
7.26 Option B
proposes the abolition of the requirement to notify ASIC of new Product
Disclosure Statements.Â
Option C: Introduce on-line reporting
of Product Disclosure Statements to ASIC
7.27 Option C
proposes an on-line reporting mechanism for product issuers to advise ASIC of
matters relating to PDS distribution. This mechanism will create efficiencies
for business in their lodgement of the required information and for ASIC in
their administration of that information.
7.28 It
proposes continuation of payment of a lodgment fee when the first in use notice
is lodged only. All subsequent changes to that notification will not be
charged.
7.29 The
report will be required to be lodged when:
·
A Statement (as defined for section 1015D(2)) is first given to
someone in a recommendation, issue or sale situation.
·
A Statement is no longer given in a recommendation, issue or sale
situation.
·
Changes are made to the fees and charges contained in the
enhanced fee disclosure table that must be provided in a Statement. The
enhanced fee disclosure table provides a standard approach for superannuation
and managed investment products to disclose fees to consumers and enable
consumers to more effectively make comparisons between products.
7.30 The
enhanced fee disclosure table was introduced as part of Superannuation Choice
on 1 July 2005. The table standardises the description and calculation methods
for fees and costs to allow for comparability and understanding of this
information in Product Disclosure Statements.
7.31 Amongst
other things, the table requires Product Disclosure Statements for
superannuation and managed investment products to include the following
components:
·
A ‘Consumer Advisory Warning Box’ which alerts consumers to the
importance of value for money and the compounding value of fees and costs and
their impact over time on end benefits;
·
A ‘Fees and Costs’ template which is a standardised fee table
that simplifies the disclosure of fees and costs and allow for more effective
comparison across products;
·
An ‘Additional Explanation of Fees and Costs’ section which will
include additional important information about fees and costs; and
·
An ‘Example of Annual Fees and Costs’ which will provides an
illustrative worked example of fees and costs in a balanced investment option
for a specified account balance and level of contributions.
Impact analysis
Impact group identification
7.32 Groups
that will be affected by the proposed amendments are:
·
consumers
·
financial product issuers; and
·
government and regulators.
Assessment of costs and benefits
Option A:Â No action
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
|
|
|
Industry
|
|
Businesses would continue to incur costs to provide
cumbersome and inadequate information.Â
|
|
Government
|
ASIC would continue to receive in-use notices (and
associated lodgment fees) from financial product issuers.Â
|
Out of date information provided to ASIC, which could
potentially hinder its regulatory performance.Â
|
Option B:Â Remove all legislative requirements to report Product Disclosure
Statements to ASIC
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
|
Potential for misleading PDSs, which are not difficult
for ASIC to detect. There is a risk that consumers would be misled and may
lose their investments in defective products. Investor protection would be
reduced as ASIC would not be aware of current financial products in the market.Â
[-3]
|
|
Industry
|
No cost to business in submitting the in-use notice.Â
[2]
|
|
|
Government
|
No administrative cost to ASIC of receiving in-use
notices. [1]
|
No revenue receipt for ASIC from lodgement fee [-1]
|
|
Sub-rating
|
3
|
-4
|
|
Overall rating
|
-1
|
Option C:Â Introduce on-line reporting of Product Disclosure Statements to
ASIC
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
Increased consumer protection arising from ASIC’s
ability to monitor and act upon the information provided in in-use notices
regarding PDSs. [3]
|
|
|
Industry
|
Reduced compliance cost for business. [2]
|
Cost to business and ASIC of provision of dual system
(paper and on-line) during the transition period to on-line only. [-1]
|
|
Government
|
Provision of useful, timely information to ASIC for
regulatory purposes. [3]
|
Cost to ASIC in development of on-line notification
system. [-2]
|
|
|
Continued collection of lodgement fee. [0]
|
|
|
|
Once in place, reduced resourcing requirements for
ASIC administration of in-use notices. [1]
|
|
|
Sub-rating
|
9
|
-3
|
|
Overall rating
|
+6
|
Business Cost Calculator
7.1 This
section presents the results of the analysis of the cost impact on business of
the various options.
7.2 For all
options, it was assumed that all businesses licensed by ASIC with the
authorisation to issue financial products do so. It was assumed that the
number of in use notices currently received by ASIC per annum represented
the number of new products and changes notified to ASIC and that a small
percentage of these would be withdrawn or amended each year. Assumptions were
made regarding the length of time required to complete and submit the required
form and hourly administration costs to business.
7.3 The
analysis results in the following costs for each option:
|
Option
|
Cost per business
|
Total cost
|
|
Option A
|
$1,500
|
$3,600,000
|
|
Option B
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
Option C
|
$1,200
|
$2,880,000
|
7.1 Option B
proposes that all legislative requirements to report PDSs to ASIC be
abolished. While this creates the lowest cost outcome, it is considered that
abolishing all reporting to ASIC imposes unnecessary risk due to the
limitations of information that would be available to ASIC. Option C will
reduce the cost to business of providing in use notice information to ASIC
through the provision of a more efficient mechanism than is currently available.Â
It is noted that there will be initial cost to the Government in this option of
establishing the on line mechanism.
Consultation
7.2 Submissions
received in response to the Corporate and Financial Services Regulation Review
Proposals Paper were strongly in favour of enabling electronic lodgement of
in-use notices. In addition to requiring electronic lodgement of in-use
notices, the proposal expands the triggers for requiring notification of
information in in-use notices to ASIC. Industry was concerned that the
additional triggers may impose further red tape and cost on their operations.
7.3 The
additional triggers proposed were: change of contact details previously
reported; withdrawal of a financial product; and change to fees and charges set
out in the fee disclosure table.
7.4 ASIC has
advised that the critical information for regulatory purposes is notification
of:
·
the date a new PDS takes effect (that is, the date it becomes
in-use);
·
the date a PDS is no longer on offer (that is, the date it
becomes out of use) (industry is arguing that this can be difficult to
determine particularly in relation to life risk insurance); and
·
changes to fees and charges set out in the enhanced fee
disclosure table.
7.5 If the
proposal to enable electronic lodgement of in-use notices proceeds, industry is
keen to ensure that the solution:
·
is tailored to take into account the category of financial
product selected so that only those items relevant to the product are required
to be completed (rather than the current paper notice that requires completion
of the whole form each time); and
·
provides adequate security and access controls over the portal.
7.6 These are
both matters of implementation that ASIC would take into consideration when
developing the electronic solution. In addition, industry would like the
proposal to:
·
reconsider the five day reporting requirement from the date the
product is first recommended and instead requires reporting from the date the
PDS is prepared; and
·
address the payment of lodgement fees and apply an appropriate
fee structure given there are a greater number of circumstances that will
trigger lodgement.
7.7 Reporting
periods were considered appropriate and not subject to change. It was
considered appropriate to apply fees when the first in use notice is lodged
only. All subsequent changes to that notification will not be charged.
Conclusion and recommended option
7.8 The
problem relates to the costs associated with lodging PDS in-use notices,
compared with the regulatory benefit from ASIC receiving such notices.
7.9 Option A
reflects the current regulatory arrangements which do not address the current
problem that ASIC has in being unable to efficiently monitor the market for
financial products and determine when a product is no longer in use, which
results in a growing database of PDSs that have been lodged with ASIC
irrespective of whether the product is still available in the market. It is
against this backdrop that the other options were considered.Â
7.10 Option B
would reduce the cost to both industry and the regulator in terms of lodging
PDS in-use notices and administering a notice system, but would remove the
ability for the regulator to monitor the market for financial products.
7.11 Option C
is the preferred option as it would improve the regulatory usefulness and
efficiency of the PDS in‑use notice system and would reduce compliance
burdens on business.
7.12 The
recommended actions all require legislative amendments to the Corporations Act.
7.13 ASIC, in
its role as regulator, will provide guidance to licensees to assist them in
meeting these requirements. ASIC, through its role in monitoring compliance
and approving alternative arrangements, will monitor the effectiveness of implementation
and will advise on any practical difficulties on an ongoing basis. Through
this monitoring role, the Government will be kept informed on any problems the
proposed regulation may cause in meeting its objectives or in possibly having
unintended consequences.
7.14 A review
of the regulations will be undertaken as part of the Government’s ongoing
review processes.
Background
9.1 A
proprietary company is a company incorporated under the Corporations Act that
is limited by share capital, has no more than 50 non-employee shareholders
and has not raised money from the public. Under the Corporations Act 2001,
a proprietary company is large for a financial year if it satisfies at least
two of the following tests:
·
the consolidated gross operating revenue for the financial year
of the company and the entities it controls is $10 million or more;
·
the value of the consolidated gross assets at the end of the
financial year of the company and the entities it controls is $5 million or
more; and
·
the company and the entities it controls have 50 or more
employees at the end of the financial year.
9.2
A large proprietary company is required to prepare and lodge an
annual report with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission
(ASIC). However, there are two minor exceptions to the general requirement for
large proprietary companies to lodge annual reports. These exemptions are
applied to wholly-owned subsidiaries using an ASIC class order and companies
incorporated prior to 1995 and had their accounted audited.
9.3
The annual report is made of up an audited financial report and a
directors’ report. Once they are lodged with ASIC, they are made available to
members of the public for a prescribed fee ($17 if the report is less than 10
pages and $33 if it is 10 pages or more). Estimates from ASIC indicate that,
on average, annual reports are accessed approximately 3 times per year.Â
However, this figure underestimates the actual number of people that benefit
from the information contained in the annual reports. A range of users,
including credit-rating agencies and journalists, directly access this material
from ASIC and disseminate it further within the community.
9.4
There are currently 5,030 large proprietary companies which lodge
annual reports with ASIC. The requirement for large proprietary companies to
lodge their financial reports was introduced in the First Corporate Law
Simplification Act 1995 to focus regulation on the financial affairs of
proprietary companies which have a significant economic influence. Requiring
these companies to lodge annual reports is in the public interest for the
following reasons:
·
The collapse of an economically significant company could have a
wider impact on the community in general particularly in regional areas. As
such, the community has an interest in the financial position of large
proprietary companies.
·
Smaller trade creditors are not in a position to demand financial
information before doing business with a company. In most cases, trade creditors
spread their risk by supplying goods or services to a large number of
companies. However, the larger a company gets, the more likely it is that
trade creditors will be supplying goods or services only to that company.
·
Employees and representative groups are not in a position to
demand financial information from a company. The ability to access public
information on the financial position of the company ensures they have some
comfort that the company is able to guarantee their ongoing operations. It
also ensures that they are not disadvantaged in the negotiation of employment
contracts. These types of agreements are more likely to be negotiated with
large employers.
9.5
These users derive a direct benefit to the extent that they act
on the information in the annual report and an indirect benefit because they
derive confidence in the knowledge that they can access the information if they
desire it. It is arguable that all companies should be required to prepare and
lodge annual reports because companies, unlike other business entities, have
the benefit of limited liability. However, it is considered that the costs of
imposing financial reporting obligations on small proprietary companies would
outweigh the benefits given their operations are not economically significant.
Problem identification
9.6
The issue that is being addressed is that under the current
thresholds, 5,030 proprietary companies are required to prepare and lodge
annual reports. The thresholds for a large proprietary company have not been
adjusted since 1995. As a result, the current thresholds are set at too low a
level to determine economic significance. This means that financial reporting
obligations are unnecessarily being imposed on a proportion of the proprietary
companies that are currently preparing annual reports. As outlined in the
analysis of the impact of options section, it is estimated that, on average, it
costs $60,000 for a company to produce an annual report.
Objectives
9.7
The objective is to ensure that all economically significant
proprietary companies are required to prepare and lodge annual reports.Â
Economically significant entities are publicly accountable because of their
size and potential to affect the community and the economy. Adjusting the
thresholds to an appropriate level will reduce the compliance cost burden for
proprietary companies that are not economically significant as they would no
longer be required to prepare and lodge audited annual reports.
Identification of options
9.8
Outlined below are the options that have been identified for
addressing the problems identified above.
Option 1
9.9
Under this option, the monetary thresholds for the definition of
a large proprietary company would be increased to reflect changes in inflation
(as measured by movements in the gross domestic product deflator) since they
were introduced in 1995. This would mean that the thresholds increase to:
·
consolidated gross operating revenue for the financial year of
the company and the entities it controls of $13 million or more; and
·
consolidated gross assets at the end of the financial year of the
company and the entities it controls of $6.5 million or more.
9.10
In addition, the employee threshold would be removed because the
revenue and asset tests provide the most relevant indicators of company size.Â
A proprietary company would be large if it satisfies either of the monetary
tests above.
Option 2
9.11
Under this option, the monetary thresholds for the definition of
a large proprietary company would be doubled to account for nominal economic
growth (as measured by changes in nominal gross domestic product) since they
were introduced in 1995. Adjusting the thresholds for nominal economic growth
(instead of real economic growth) means that the increase in the thresholds
will include a component for inflation as well as economic growth. Under this
option, the thresholds increase to:
·
consolidated gross operating revenue for the financial year of
the company and the entities it controls of $20 million or more; and
·
consolidated gross assets at the end of the financial year of the
company and the entities it controls of $10 million or more.
9.12
In addition, the employee threshold would be removed because the
revenue and asset tests provide the most relevant indicators of company size.Â
A proprietary company would be large if it satisfies either of the monetary
tests above.
Option 3
9.13
Under this option, the monetary thresholds would be increased by
a multiple of 2.5 (that is, 150 per cent). This would result in increases to
the revenue and assets thresholds of $5 million and $2.5 million respectively
in addition to adjusting the thresholds for nominal economic growth. Under
this option, the thresholds increase to:
·
consolidated gross operating revenue for the financial year of
the company and the entities it controls of $25 million or more; and
·
consolidated gross assets at the end of the financial year of the
company and the entities it controls of $12.5 million or more.
9.14
In addition, the employee threshold would be removed because the
revenue and asset tests provide the most relevant indicators of company size.Â
A proprietary company would be large if it satisfies either of the monetary
tests above.
Option 4
9.15
Under this option, proprietary companies would not be required to
prepare an annual report. Outlined below are the options that have been
identified for addressing the problems identified above.
Analysis of the impact of the options
9.16
These options are being evaluated against each other as well as
the status quo. The following discussion of costs and benefits of the options
is largely qualitative, with some estimates where information is available.Â
The draft Regulatory Impact Statement, which was released in conjunction with
the Proposals Paper, sought to gain an insight into the costs and benefits of
requiring proprietary company financial reporting.
Option 1
Benefits
9.17
Under this option, approximately 134 fewer large proprietary
companies would be required to prepare and lodge annual reports. This means
that there would be 4,896 large proprietary companies that meet the new
thresholds lodging annual reports with ASIC.
9.18
It is estimated that the average cost of preparing an annual
report is $60,000. This figure is based on the assumption that the average
cost to audit the financial report of a large proprietary company is $40,000
(this figure would vary depending on the size and complexity of the audit) and
it costs a large proprietary company, on average, $20,000 to prepare a
financial report and directors’ report (this figure attempts to take into
account that companies will already be preparing some financial information for
internal reporting and taxation purposes). The saving to business as a result
of this option would be approximately $8.0 million per year.
Costs
9.19
Users would no longer be able to access the annual reports of 134
proprietary companies. This is a cost for direct users of the annual reports
and an indirect cost to the market as a whole as people no longer have the
confidence in knowing that annual reports are available. It will also
disadvantage people who benefited from the information being disseminated in
the market as identified in the background section (for example, a
credit-rating agency would no longer be able make recommendations on these companies
because they will not have access to the necessary financial information). The
benefit that users would lose because they are no longer able to access those
reports is difficult to estimate. However, it is expected that the costs will
not be significant because the 134 companies that would no longer be required
to report are not economically significant, so it is unlikely that the public
would be currently accessing their annual reports.
Option 2
Benefits
9.20
Under this option, 645 fewer large proprietary companies would be
required to lodge annual reports with ASIC. This means that there would be
4,385 large proprietary companies that meet the new thresholds lodging annual
reports with ASIC. Using the assumptions presented under Option 1, the benefit
to business would be approximately $38.7 million per year.
Costs
9.21
Users would no longer be able to access the annual reports of 645
proprietary companies. This is a cost for direct users of the annual reports
and an indirect cost to the market as a whole as people no longer have the
confidence in knowing that annual reports are available. It will also
disadvantage people who benefited from the information being disseminated in
the market as identified in the background section (for example, a credit-rating
agency would no longer be able make recommendations on these companies because
they will not have access to the necessary financial information). The benefit
that users would lose because they are no longer able to access those reports
is difficult to estimate. However, the costs will be greater than the costs
for Option 1, but are still unlikely to be significant because the additional
511 companies (645 less the 134 excluded as a result of Option 1) that would no
longer be required to report are also not economically significant. As these
companies are no longer considered to be economically significant, the public
is unlikely to require access to this information.
Option 3
Benefits
9.22
Under this option, 1,006 fewer large proprietary companies would
be required to lodge annual reports with ASIC. This means that there would be
4,024 large proprietary companies that meet the new thresholds lodging annual
reports with ASIC. Using the assumptions presented under Option 1, the benefit
to business would be approximately $60.4 million per year.
Costs
9.23
Users would no longer be able to access the annual reports of
1,006 proprietary companies. This is a cost for direct users of the annual
reports and an indirect cost to the market as a whole as people no longer have
the confidence in knowing that annual reports are available. It will also
disadvantage people who benefited from the information being disseminated in
the market as identified in the background section (for example, a credit-rating
agency would no longer be able make recommendations on these companies because
they will not have access to the necessary financial information). The benefit
that users would lose because they are no longer able to access those reports
is difficult to estimate. However, the costs will be greater than the costs
for Options 1 and 2, but are still unlikely to be significant because the
additional 361 companies (1006 less the 645 excluded as a result of Option 2)
that would no longer be required to report are also not economically
significant. As these companies are no longer considered to be economically
significant, the public is unlikely to require access to this information.
Option 4
Benefits
9.24
This option would result in 5,030 fewer large proprietary companies
being required to prepare and lodge annual reports. Using the assumptions
presented under Option 1, the benefit to business would be approximately $301.8
million per year.
Costs
9.25
Under this option, all large proprietary companies would be exempt
from the requirements to prepare and lodge annual reports. On top of the costs
outlined in options 1, 2 and 3, removing the mandatory requirements is likely
to result in additional costs that could affect the wider economy through the
loss of confidence and by constraining the ability of large proprietary
companies to access capital (see analysis below). These costs are unlikely to
be relevant for options 1, 2 and 3. However, they are likely to be substantive
for large proprietary companies with revenues in excess of $25 million.
Economy wide effects
9.26
Under the current regime, economically significant proprietary
companies are required to prepare and lodge annual reports. The reports
provide a means to access and understand the company’s economic behaviour and
bring together fragmented sources of information into a more informed medium.Â
The information contained in these reports can provide valuable signals to the
market, particularly about the underlying state of the business, which could
affect its on going operations or financial viability.
9.27
Removing the mandatory requirements would restrict information
flows. The preparation of financial reports provides confidence in this market
sector by providing greater financial transparency. For example, investors may
obtain comfort in knowing the specific factors behind a company going into
administration that can be derived from the company’s annual report. This will
help ensure that the collapse of one company does not reduce confidence in the market
more generally. The effects from any market wide loss of confidence could have
a significant impact on the economy and future economic growth. For example,
investors may divert their savings into other investment forms which are less
productive, reduce liquidity and the depth of the domestic capital markets and
lead to volatility in asset prices. This may also have a flow on effect of
reducing consumption and investments.
9.28
In addition, having annual reports publicly available through
ASIC is likely to significantly lower the search costs for direct users.
Large proprietary companies — accessing capital
9.29
Removing the obligations to prepare financial reports may limit
immediate access to alternative forms of capital and therefore restrict a company’s
ability to expand. For example, in order to list on a stock exchange, a
company must provide audited accounts for the last three financial years. The
absence of statutory requirements to produce financial reports will not in
itself prevent an entity from raising capital from a public listing as they
could voluntarily start producing this material in anticipation of any public
listing. However, the advantage of the statutory financial reporting
requirement is that it enables entities to gain more immediate access to new
capital.
9.30
If entities were unable to access capital through a public
listing, they would have to rely on more traditional forms of financing
facilities, such as bank financing. Access to capital markets enables them to
expand their operations beyond that which would normally be available through
bank finance and pursue innovative ideas. Therefore, removing the requirements
to prepare financial reports could restrict access to varying forms of capital,
leading to a sub-optimal allocation of resources.
Total costs
9.31
The total cost associated with large proprietary companies not
preparing financial reports for all purposes is difficult to estimate.Â
However, given the wider economic effects, the potential impact on large
proprietary companies accessing capital and general user concerns, these costs
would be significantly greater than the costs under Options 1, 2, and 3. It is
expected that the costs of this Option would be considerable and outweigh the
benefits.
Consultation
9.32
The Australian Government released a consultation paper Corporate
and Financial Services Regulation Review Proposals Paper on 16 November 2006,
which contained initiatives to simplify the regulatory system and reduce
compliance costs on business. One of the proposals contained in the Proposals
Paper canvassed increasing the reporting thresholds used to define a large
proprietary company to ensure that only economically significant companies
prepare and lodge their financial reports. The period for public submissions
closed on 19 January 2007.
9.33
Submissions were generally supportive of large proprietary
companies preparing and lodging their financial reports with ASIC. In the
main, respondents recognised that economically significant proprietary companies
were publicly accountable with financial reporting obligations. For example,
one respondent noted that the requirement for large proprietary companies to
prepare audited financial reports significantly enhances the governance of
these entities. Most of the submissions from respondents focussed on the
monetary thresholds used to define a large proprietary company.
9.34
Overall submissions were largely supportive of the proposed 150
per cent increase in the revenue and asset thresholds. There was broad acceptance
that the higher monetary thresholds would ensure that only genuine economically
significant entities would be captured under the new reporting framework.
9.35
However, some respondents raised concerns about the proposal to
remove the employee limb. They claimed that removing the employee limb would
lead to a larger number of asset-rich entities that have few employees and
limited revenue streams being required to report for the first time. They
argued that the removal of the employee limb would lead to higher compliance
and administration costs, which was inconsistent with the Government’s
objective to reduce the regulatory burden on business. A number of respondents
argued that this anomaly could be addressed by retaining the employee limb, that
is, a return to the ‘two out of three’ test.
9.36
The majority of respondents observed that a mechanism for the
periodic review of the thresholds was necessary to ensure that the thresholds
continue to accurately reflect genuine economic significance during period and
long and sustained economic growth. They also noted that this would ensure
that as the economy expands, entities that are no longer economically
significant would not be captured.
Conclusion and recommended option
9.37
The Government recognises that there is a cost to proprietary
companies in preparing their financial reports. Therefore, it only seeks to
impose these reporting requirements on economically significant proprietary
companies. However, the existing size test has not kept pace with economic
growth and inflation because it has not been adjusted since 1995. This
has increased the regulatory burden on proprietary companies as more companies
exceed the threshold.
9.38
There is significant public interest in the annual reports of proprietary
companies that are economically significant. This discounts the adoption of
Option 4 as the overall costs of not requiring the preparation of annual
reports will significantly outweigh the benefits that would flow to these
companies from reducing the compliance burden. As identified in the background
section, potential users of annual reports include trade creditors, employees,
credit-rating agencies, journalists and the wider community. In addition,
requiring economically significant proprietary companies to report promotes
greater confidence in the market place and facilitates the public listing of
large proprietary companies as a means of access alternative forms of capital.Â
A size test provides a simple objective test which a company can apply to
determine whether it is required to lodge an annual report.
9.39
However, submissions to the Proposals Paper raised a concern
about the removal of the employee limb. Submissions noted that the removal of
the employee limb would result in asset-rich entities with few employees and
limited revenue streams being captured whereas in the past these entities were
not required to report.
9.40
Following analysis of this issue, the Government has decided to
retain the employee limb (at 50 employees) and return to the ‘two out of three’
test. Unlike the monetary thresholds, the number of employees is not
influenced by economic growth or inflation. In addition, productivity
improvements have also meant that businesses can produce higher output levels
with the same level of employees than in the corresponding period in 1995.
9.41
Under the recommended option, the new thresholds are:
·
consolidated revenue for the financial year of the company and
the entities it controls of $25 million or more;
·
consolidated gross assets at the end of the financial year of the
company and the entities it controls of $12.5 million or more; and
·
the company and the entities it controls (if any) have
50 employees at the end of the financial year.
9.42
A proprietary company would be large if it satisfies ‘two of the
three’ tests above.
9.43
There would be 1,646 fewer large proprietary companies that would
be required to lodge their annual reports with ASIC under this option. This
means that there would be 3,384 large proprietary companies that meet the new
thresholds. Using the same assumptions that were presented under Option 1, the
benefit to business would be $98.9 million. The main cost associated with this
option is related to the fact that 1,646 proprietary companies are no longer
preparing and lodging their financial reports. Similar to previous options,
the costs relate to direct users losing confidence in knowing that annual
reports were no longer available or loss of information that was previously
disseminated. Given that these entities are not considered to be economically
significant, the costs are unlikely to be significant.
9.44
There was widespread support from stakeholders, including the
three professional bodies (Institute of Chartered Accountants, CPA Australia
and the National Institute of Accountants) for the recommended option.
Implementation and review
9.45
It is anticipated that the required legislation to enable the
changes to the reporting thresholds would form part of the Simpler Regulatory
System Bill, which is expected to be introduced in the 2007 sittings.
9.46
The Government recognises that the thresholds need to be reviewed
on a regular basis to ensure that only economically significant entities are
captured under the reporting framework. The Government has decided in
corporate a mechanism to regularly assess the thresholds through the
Corporation Regulations.
Financial impact statement
9.47
Large proprietary companies are currently required to lodge their
financial statements with ASIC. Direct users of the reports are allowed to
access them for a prescribed fee. This fee is applied to recover ASIC’s
administration costs for making the report available to the public. As a
result, implementation of the proposed thresholds will have no financial impact
on the Commonwealth.
10.1 The
issues contained in this Regulatory Impact Statement (RIS) relate to the
fundraising provisions in the Corporations Act 2001 (the Corporations
Act). These provisions are contained in Chapter 6D ‘Fundraising’ of the Act.
10.2 Chapter
6D was inserted in the Corporations Act through the Corporate Law Economic
Reform Program Act 1999. It builds on the previous general prospectus disclosure
rules, but includes a number of additional provisions relating to the use of
new instruments such as short form prospectuses and offer information
statements, clarification of the persons liable for contraventions of the
provisions, a new definition of sophisticated investors and others.
10.3 The
Chapter 6D provisions have on the whole worked well and have supported a strong
market in fundraisings since they were introduced. According to a recent
survey conducted by KPMG, total equity fundraisings in Australia in 2005/06
amounted to A$42.5 billion, which represents an increase of
42 per cent since 2000/01. Over time, however, it has become
apparent that there are some shortcomings in the practical application of the
provisions. Some of these affect the smooth operation of market processes,
while others are more substantial in their effects, resulting in the skewing of
market outcomes in ways that may not accord with Government policy.
10.4 The
proposals examined in this RIS relate to those shortcomings which have a more
substantial distorting effect on the market.
Rights Issues
10.5 Rights
issues are a method of fundraising in which existing shareholders in a listed
entity are given the opportunity to purchase new shares in proportion to their
holdings at specified terms. The current legislation requires that rights
issues must be accompanied by a prospectus (or a Product Disclosure Statement
(PDS) in the case of a listed managed investment scheme). As a result, the use
of rights issues as a fundraising instrument has, to some extent, been
superseded by other forms of fundraising with less onerous disclosure
requirements. An example is a placement of shares to large institutional
investors, which can be accomplished without a prospectus. One of the
consequences of such placements is that existing shareholders and fund members
may be disadvantaged. Small shareholders, for example, are generally not able
to participate in these placements and therefore cannot acquire shares at the
discount typically offered in such placements.
10.6 Further,
rights issues often occur in circumstances where speed of execution is an
important factor. The requirement to produce a prospectus or PDS may give rise
to delays which may cause issuers difficulties in the circumstances and may
lead to some other, faster form of fundraising being favoured, with
consequences for existing shareholders similar to those set out above.
10.7 The
impact of easing disclosure requirements may be illustrated using the
placements market as an example in comparison to the rights issue market. The
ability to raise funds through a placement of shares without full prospectus
disclosure was made possible through the Corporate Law Economic Reform
Program (Audit Reform and Corporate Disclosure) Act 2004 which inserted
section 708A in Chapter 6D of the Corporations Act. The relevant provisions
formally commenced on 1 July 2004, so that any impact they had on the
fundraising market would have become apparent in the statistics for the 2004/05
financial year. The statistics shown in the table below demonstrate a marked
increase in funds raised through placements in that and the following year.Â
Amounts raised through rights issues have, in contrast, stayed at a similar
level in those two years and have lagged behind funds raised through
placements.
|
A$bn
|
Equity raised in Australia 2001-2006
|
|
|
|
2000/01
|
2001/02
|
2002/03
|
2003/04
|
2004/05
|
2005/06
|
|
Placements
|
|
7.48
|
13.74
|
7.33
|
7.74
|
8.75
|
11.61
|
|
Rights issues
|
|
1.95
|
2.58
|
6.86
|
10.10
|
5.7
|
5.66
|
Employee shareholder schemes
10.1 Employee
Shareholder Schemes (ESSs) are held to improve the productivity of the economy
by aligning the interests of employees with those of their employer. The
Australian Government’s established policy therefore supports the introduction
of ESSs in companies, with a variety of measures being put in place to give
effect to the Government’s policy.
10.2 The offer
and issue of shares to employees constitute actions that fall within the scope
of the investor protection provisions of the Corporations Act. The
consequences are that under the law, companies establishing ESSs must comply
with the fundraising requirements in Chapter 6D as well as the licensing and
disclosure requirements in Chapter 7 of that Act. In addition, the current law
relating to the self‑acquisition of shares by companies creates
difficulties for the practical implementation of ESSs. The cumulative effect
is to discourage the wider establishment of ESSs, especially among unlisted
companies.
10.3 Relief
from the full provisions of the law is provided by the Australian Securities
and Investments Commission (ASIC) for listed companies, based on the
consideration that ongoing disclosure of all price-sensitive information is
required as a condition of maintaining a listing. Unlisted companies, however,
do not benefit from this relief. The ultimate consequence is that employees of
unlisted companies generally have fewer opportunities to participate in the
ownership of their employers than in the case of listed companies.
Policy objective
Rights issues
10.4 The
objective is to create an environment in which companies make decisions on
fundraising methods based on comparative merits and characteristics rather than
on regulatory requirements. This would be achieved by creating a level playing
field for all comparable fundraising methods.
10.5 The
solutions identified should impose the lowest possible costs on companies
wishing to raise funds, in order to encourage an active market in fundraisings
of all descriptions. It is, however, important at the same time to ensure that
investors are provided with all the information they require to make an
informed decision about whether to participate in the fundraising or not.
Employee share schemes
10.6 The
discouragement of ESSs in unlisted companies through the impact of the investor
protection provisions of the Corporations Act does not accord with the general
policy of supporting the introduction of ESSs. The objective is to minimise
the impact of these investor protection provisions on the formation of ESSs in
unlisted companies, while ensuring that employees who are offered a chance to
participate in an unlisted company ESSs are provided with sufficient
information to make an informed decision on whether to participate or not.
10.7 The
Australian Government’s policy supporting ESSs in general is based on a number
of benefits that may accrue to companies and the wider economy through the
establishment of ESSs. The Nelson Report into employee share ownership in
Australia (tabled in 2000) identified the main benefits as follows:
·
better alignment of the interests of general employees and
employers, leading to more productive enterprises;
·
an increase in national savings;
·
facilitation of the development of certain small and medium-sized
companies, especially in certain sunrise industries such as information
technology and biotechnology; and
·
facilitation of employee buyouts and succession planning in small
businesses.
10.8 The
Government’s response to the Nelson Report reaffirmed its policy approach to
ESSs, which balances promoting benefits that may accrue as a result of aligning
the interests of employees and employers and limiting opportunities for
overuse. In 2004, the Government set a target to increase the proportion of
employees with shares in their company to 11 per cent by 2009, compared to 5.9
per cent in 2004.
10.9
To further encourage the growth of ESSs in Australia, the
Government has established an Employee Share Ownership Development Unit within
the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations (DEWR). The unit’s activities include:
·
providing information and raising awareness about the potential
benefits of employee share ownership through information materials and
seminars;
·
assisting employers and employees with design and implementation
of schemes; and
·
collecting information about the barriers to the uptake of
employee share ownership and informing developments to overcome these barriers.
10.10 Information
on the Government’s policies in relation to ESSs and specific measures to
encourage their wider use is available through the units website, which may be
accessed through the DEWR website at www.dewr.gov.au.
10.11 The
Australian Government has also provided a range of tax benefits to encourage
the wider establishment of ESSs. However, the amendments examined in this RIS
do not address the tax treatment of ESSs and do not propose any changes in this
respect.
Implementation options
Rights issues
Option A:Â Do nothing:
·
Under this option listed entities raising funds through a rights
issue would have to produce a prospectus or PDS. Certain other forms of
fundraising such as institutional placements would not require a prospectus, as
provided for in the current law.
Option B:Â Require a prospectus for all fundraisings:
·
Under this option all forms of fundraising would require a
prospectus or PDS, in order to ensure that all investors, including retail
investors, were able to participate in these fundraisings. This would address
the disadvantage suffered by small members of listed entities in institutional
placements where they are not able to participate because of the lack of
adequate disclosure.
Option C:Â Remove the prospectus requirement for rights issues subject to
the obligation to provide certain defined information to the market:
·
Under this option the requirement to issue a prospectus or PDS
for rights issues would be removed in the case of listed entities. The scope
of the exemption would be limited to listed entities on the grounds that the
combination of an original prospectus on listing and the continuous disclosure
rules would ensure the provision of an appropriate flow of information to
members necessary for informed decision‑making.
·
However, under certain circumstances as defined in the Australian
Securities Exchange Listing Rules price-sensitive information may be withheld
from the market. It would be necessary to provide that such information must
be disclosed before a rights issue can proceed. This could be achieved by
requiring that a ‘cleansing’ notice, modelled on the provisions of section 708A
of the Corporations Act, be provided.
·
Cleansing notices as required under section 708A are limited to
the provision of any information withheld from the market under the Australian
Securities Exchange Listing Rules. They are therefore far more restricted in
scope than a prospectus or other disclosure document as defined in Chapter 6D
of the Corporations Act, and therefore impose a much lower compliance burden on
issuers.
·
Under this option a new section would be inserted in the
Corporations Act dealing with the exemption of rights issues from the
disclosure requirements, including the requirement to provide a cleansing
notice. The exemption would extend to the issuer only, since any on‑sales
by third parties (such as an underwriter to the issue) could take advantage of
the existing disclosure exemption in section 708A. Such on‑sales would
have to be covered by the issue of another cleansing notice, as required under
section 708A.
·
Further, in certain circumstances rights issues may potentially
lead to a shareholder or underwriter acquiring control or obtaining or
significantly increasing voting power above the 20 per cent takeover
threshold. It is vital to ensure that members are provided with full
information on the potential effects of the rights issue before they decide
whether or not to take up their rights. The contents requirements for the
cleansing notice would therefore be worded in such a way that issuers would
have to provide information on the effects of the rights issue on the control
of the company, as well as the consequences of any potential effects on
control.
Employee share schemes
Option A:Â Do nothing:
·
Under this option unlisted company ESSs would continue to have to
comply with the disclosure and licensing provisions of the Corporations Act.Â
The main requirement in this respect is the provision of a prospectus including
audited financial statements. Certain licensing requirements would also apply
to the sponsoring company or related entities established for the operation of
the ESS. An example would be the requirement for trustees managing the scheme
on behalf of employees to hold a licence for the provision of custodial and
depository services. Listed companies, as mentioned above, would continue to
receive relief from most of these requirements.
Option B:Â Provide extensive relief for unlisted company ESSs from the
relevant provisions of the Corporations Act
·
The main relief would be to remove the requirement to provide a
prospectus including audited financial statements, and substitute a specific
ESS document tailored to the needs of employees in these situations.
·
The requirements in relation to the proposed ESS document would differ
from the prospectus requirements by providing a specific list of items to be
included. The items would mainly relate to the nature of the securities to be
offered, the working of the plan under which employees would participate in the
ESS, amounts payable by employees for shares acquired, the tax implications for
participating employees and an explanation of how the plan would be
administered and managed. Small proprietary companies as defined in the
Corporations Act would be released from the requirement to provide audited
financial statements. In addition a statement would have to be included that
the document was not a prospectus, and provided a lower level of disclosure
than a prospectus.
·
The general disclosure test applying to a prospectus, that it
must contain all information that an investor and their professional adviser
would reasonably require to make an informed assessment of the offer, would not
apply to the ESS disclosure document. The specific items that are required to
be included in a prospectus would not apply. This would result in a lower
level of disclosure of information to employees, and would significantly reduce
the cost of compliance to companies in producing these documents.
·
Extensive licensing relief would also be provided, which would
free companies from the need to submit relevant applications to ASIC and comply
with the initial and ongoing licensing requirements.
Option C:Â Provide limited relief for unlisted company ESSs from the
relevant provisions of the Corporations Act
·
Under this option the licensing and disclosure requirements would
be reduced to a level that would remain consistent with providing an adequate
level of investor protection for employees considering participating in
unlisted company ESSs. Specific proposals under this option include:
·
Facilitate the use of Offer Information Statements as defined in
the Corporations Act for unlisted company ESSs. The content requirements for
prospectuses are defined on a very high level in the Corporations Act as
encompassing all the information that an investor would reasonably require to
assess the offer made. As a consequence, substantial due diligence by legal
advisers is required to ensure compliance with the law. The content
requirements for an Offer Information Statement, on the other hand, are
expressed in narrower terms that do not require extensive due diligence
exercises.
·
Audited financial statements would continue to be required. The
reason is that reliable financial statements are held to be essential for
assessing the condition and prospects of a company.
·
Partial licensing relief would be granted where it would not
impact on the interests of employees. Certain critical functions, such as
offering advice to employees considering participation in the scheme, would
continue to require an appropriate licence.
·
Relief from the provisions of the law relating to the prohibition
of the self-acquisition of shares by a company or related entity would be
granted to facilitate the daily operation of ESSs.
Assessment of impacts
10.12 Impacts
are divided between three impact groups (consumers, business and government).Â
Typical impacts of an option on consumers might be changes in access to a
market, the level of information and disclosure provided, or prices of goods or
services. Typical impacts of an option on business would be the changes in the
costs of compliance with a regulatory requirement. Typical impacts on
government might be the costs of administering a regulatory requirement. Some
impacts, such as changes in overall confidence in a market, may impact on more
than one impact group.
10.13 The
assessment of impacts in this regulation statement is based on a seven-point
scale (‑3 to +3). The impacts of each option are compared with the
equivalent impact of the ‘do nothing’ option. If an impact on the impact group
would, relative to doing nothing, be beneficial, the impact is allocated a
positive rating of +1 to +3, depending on the magnitude of the relative
benefit. On the other hand, if the impact imposes an additional cost on the
impact group relative to the status quo, the impact is allocated a negative
rating of -1 to -3, depending on the magnitude of the relative cost. If the
impact is the same as that imposed under the current situation, a zero score
would be given (although usually the impact would not be listed in such a
case).Â
10.14 The
magnitude of the rating of a particular impact associated with an option has
been assigned taking into account the overall potential impact on the impact
group. The reference point is always the status quo (or ‘do nothing’ option).Â
Whether the cost or benefit is one-off or recurring, and whether it would fall
on a small or large proportion of the impact group (in the case of business and
consumers), is factored into the rating. For example, a cost or benefit, even though
large for the persons concerned, may not result in the maximum rating (+/-3) if
it is a one-off event that only falls on a few individuals. Conversely, a
small increase in costs or benefits might be given a moderate or high rating if
it would be likely to recur or if it falls on a large proportion of the impact
group. The rating scale for individual impacts is explained in the table
below.
Rating
an individual impact
|
+3
|
+2
|
+1
|
0
|
-1
|
-2
|
-3
|
|
Large benefit/
advantage compared to ‘do nothing’
|
Moderate benefit/
advantage compared to ‘do nothing’
|
Small benefit/
advantage compared to ‘do nothing’
|
No substantial change from do nothing
|
Small cost/
disadvantage compared to ‘do nothing’
|
Moderate cost/
disadvantage compared to ‘do nothing’
|
Large cost/
disadvantage compared to ‘do nothing’
|
10.1 The
ratings for the individual impacts compared to the status quo are then tallied
to produce an overall outcome for the option. If it is positive, it indicates
that the option is likely to produce a more favourable cost/benefit ratio than
the status quo. If it is zero there would be no overall benefit from adopting
the option, and if negative the option would provide overall a less favourable
cost/benefit ratio than the ‘do nothing’ option. Ordinarily, options that have
the highest positive score would be the favoured courses of action.
10.2 What is
classed as a ‘large’, ‘moderate’ or ‘small’ cost or benefit depends on the
nature of the problem and options being considered. Of course, the costs and
benefits associated with options to address a problem costing billions of
dollars per year are likely to be of a much greater absolute magnitude than the
costs and benefits of options for dealing with a rather modest issue that
effects only a handful of persons. However, as all the ratings are made
relative to the status quo/ do nothing option for a particular problem, the
absolute value of ‘large’ or ‘moderate’ or ‘small’ is not really important.Â
All that matters is that within a problem assessment, the impacts of each
option are given appropriate ratings relative to the status quo and each
other. If that occurs, it will be sufficient for the methodology to yield an
overall rating that assists in assessing the relative merits of options, from a
cost/benefit perspective, to address the particular problem.
10.3 An
example of the rating calculation for an option, using the seven‑point
scale ratings of impacts, is in the table below. The example is based on a
purely hypothetical scenario that a new type of long-wearing vehicle tyre is
being sold and marketed, but it has become apparent that the new tyres have a
higher risk of exploding while in motion than conventional tyres. The example
is designed merely to illustrate how the rating scale might be used to compare
a proposal’s costs and benefits option to the ‘do nothing’ option – it is not
intended to be a comprehensive or realistic assessment of options to address
such a problem.
10.4 Illustrative
ratings for the problem of a long-wearing tyre that may fail are provided in
the table below:
Option A:Â Do nothing
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
Access to a cheaper solution for vehicle tyres
|
Risk of tyre failure that can result in personal and
property damage as a result of collision. Damage can be severe but cases are
rare.
|
|
Industry
|
|
Some compensation payments to persons as a result of
collisions caused by the tyre
|
|
Government
|
Advantages from a waste management perspective
|
|
Option B:Â Ban on sale of the new tyre
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
No persons will not be affected by tyre failure and
resultant damage (+3)
|
Lack of access by all consumers to long-wearing
vehicle tyres, increasing the cost of vehicle maintenance (-2)
|
|
Industry
|
No compensation payments for accident victims (+1)
|
Transitional costs involved with switching back all
manufacturing/marketing operations to conventional tyres (-3)
|
|
Government
|
|
Conventional tyres produce more waste which is costly
to deal with (-1)
|
|
Sub-rating
|
+4
|
-6
|
|
Overall rating
|
-2
|
Option C:Â Industry-developed quality control standards
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
Much lower risk of tyre failure and resultant damage
than status quo (+2)
|
|
|
Industry
|
Significantly less compensation payments for accident
victims (+1)
|
Developing and monitoring industry-wide quality
control standards (-2)
|
|
Government
|
|
|
|
Sub-rating
|
+3
|
-2
|
|
Overall rating
|
+1
|
10.1 In the
above hypothetical example, Option C appears to have a better impact for
consumers and a better overall cost/benefit rating than Option B. Although
Option B appears to offer a slightly better impact for consumers, it appears to
be less effective from an overall cost/benefit perspective than Option C.
Analysis of costs/benefits
Rights issues
10.2 The
analysis of the costs and benefits of the options associated with this measure
are summarised in the tables below.
Option A:Â Do nothing
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
|
Retail investors would continue to be disadvantaged as
other forms of fundraising were used by companies to avoid the cost of
preparing a prospectus.
|
|
Industry
|
Would avoid imposing any additional compliance costs
on industry as they could continue to raise funds through methods not
requiring prospectus disclosure.
|
The regulatory system would preserve a bias in favour
of fundraising methods that do not require prospectus disclosure, without a
fundamental policy reason for doing so.
|
|
Government
|
|
|
Option B:Â Require a prospectus for all fundraisings
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
All forms of fundraisings would be treated on an equal
footing, by having to provide a prospectus. (+1)
Retail investors would be able to participate in share
placements (+2)
|
Retail investors may suffer from the reduction in
fundraisings that may occur as a consequence of this option. The imposition
of additional compliance costs on fundraisings that currently do not require
a prospectus would be expected to reduce the amount of funds raised in the
Australian market. Larger entities may, for instance, be able to access the
international capital markets at a lower cost. This could ultimately have a
detrimental effect on the development of the capital markets and the financial
services industry in Australia as a whole, with negative effects across all
sectors of the economy. (-3)
|
|
Industry
|
|
Additional compliance costs would be imposed on listed
entities through having to provide a prospectus in cases where none is
currently required. Such costs may be significant depending on the amount of
funds raised. Minimum costs for a small fundraising may be estimated at
approximately $50,000, largely in legal, accounting and other professional
services fees, but would be much higher where larger amounts were raised.Â
(-3)
|
Option B:Â Require a prospectus for all fundraisings (continued)
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Government
|
|
This proposal would require increased oversight by
ASIC, due to the larger number of prospectuses lodged by the market. ASIC
vets prospectuses for infringements of the contents requirements, and has the
power to issue stop orders where such infringements are found. The increased
costs would take the form of additional personnel and time spent on vetting
prospectuses and taking regulatory action where necessary. (-3)
|
|
Sub-rating
|
+3
|
-9
|
|
Overall rating
|
-6
|
Option C:Â Remove the prospectus requirement for rights issues subject to
the obligation to provide certain defined information to the market
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
This proposal would
reduce the bias in favour of placements done without a prospectus, leading to
an increased use of rights issues. This may benefit retail investors who are
unable to participate in placements to institutional investors.Â
Institutional placements may still retain a cost advantage over issues to
retail investors, but issuers may be more inclined to consider other factors
in deciding on the method of fundraisings, such as the less volatile nature
of retail shareholders. (+3)
|
There will not be a
reduction in the amount of information provided to investors as all relevant
information will have to be disclosed either under the continuous disclosure
requirements or through the provision of the cleansing notice. There may
however be some loss of convenience to investors in accessing the information
in comparison to the current situation, where all relevant information is
summarised in the prospectus. (-1)
|
|
Industry
|
The requirement to provide an appropriate ‘cleansing’
notice would ensure that investors were fully informed about key information
relating to the rights issue, in particular where there was a potential
effect on the control of the company. (+2)
Listed entities would no longer need to produce a
prospectus for a rights issue. As mentioned above, the minimum cost of a
prospectus may be estimated at about $30,000, but could be much more where
larger amounts are raised. (+2)
|
Listed entities would have to provide a ‘cleansing’
notice to the market prior to launching the rights offer. This would be done
through the Australian Securities Exchange’s company announcements platform,
which is a computerised system through which announcements by listed entities
are transmitted to the Australian Securities Exchange and published. The
marginal cost of providing announcements using this system is small. The
requirement to issue a cleansing notice may also deter certain issuers from
conducting a rights issue if they are unwilling to disclose certain
information to the market. (-1)
|
Option C:Â Remove the prospectus requirement for rights issues subject to
the obligation to provide certain defined information to the market (continued)
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Government
|
ASIC would have fewer prospectuses to review, against
which the additional costs of monitoring the increased number of rights
issues would have to be offset. (+1)
|
|
|
Sub-rating
|
+8
|
-2
|
|
Overall rating
|
+6
|
Employee shareholder schemes
10.1 The
analysis of the costs and benefits of the options associated with this measure
are summarised in the tables below.
Option A:Â Do nothing
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
No additional compliance costs would be imposed.
|
Employees of unlisted companies would continue to have
fewer opportunities to participate in the ownership of their employers.
|
|
Industry
|
|
ESSs for unlisted companies would continue to incur
high compliance costs due to the need to comply with the relevant provisions
of the Corporations Act.
|
|
Government
|
|
The law would continue to prevent the wider spread of
ESSs. This would also limit the benefits to the economy attributable to
ESSs.
|
Option B:Â Provide extensive relief for unlisted company ESS from the provisions
of the Corporations Act
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
|
Investor protection levels would be drastically
reduced under this option. There would be a strong possibility that some
employees would participate in ESSs without being provided with an
appropriate level of information about the company and its prospects. (-3)
|
|
Industry
|
There would be a considerable reduction in compliance
costs for unlisted companies establishing an ESS. Relief from the prospectus
requirement alone may reduce costs by a minimum of $50,000 or more. (+3)
|
|
|
Government
|
The proposal would strongly support the Government’s
policy with regard to the wider use of ESSs.Â
The Government’s policy is based on the wider benefits
associated with ESSs. The Nelson Report into employee share ownership in
Australia (tabled in 2000) identified the main benefits as follows:
- better alignment of the interests of general
employees and employers, leading to more productive enterprises;
- an increase in national savings;
- facilitation of the development of certain small and
medium-sized companies, especially in certain sunrise industries such as IT
and biotechnology; and
- facilitation of employee buyouts and succession
planning in small businesses.
(+2)
|
Subsequent problems relating to unlisted company ESSs
with consequent losses of benefits to employees would give rise to criticism
of the law and the lack of protection for employees it provided. Confidence
in the investor protection regime would be likely to suffer as a
consequence. Calls for reform of the relevant provisions in the law would be
likely. (-3)
|
|
Sub-rating
|
+5
|
-6
|
|
Overall rating
|
-1
|
Option C:Â Exempt unlisted company ESSs from certain provisions of the
Corporations Act, while maintaining an adequate level of investor protection
for employees considering participation in such schemes
|
|
Benefits
|
Costs
|
|
Consumers
|
Employees of unlisted companies who were offered
participation in an ESS would be given an adequate level of information and
advice in considering whether to participate or not. (+3)
|
|
|
Industry
|
There would be a
reduction in compliance costs for unlisted companies establishing an ESS,
particularly through the licensing relief. (+2)
|
Unlisted companies
would incur a certain level of compliance costs for establishing an ESS.Â
There would also be ongoing costs where a company maintained access to the
ESS for employees on a continuing basis. An example would be the need to
update the offer document including the preparation of audited accounts.Â
Establishment and ongoing costs would be lower than those under Option A, but
higher than under Option B. (-2)
|
|
Government
|
The proposal would give appropriate effect to the
Government’s policy of supporting the widespread use of ESSs with consequent
benefits to unlisted company productivity and the wider economy, as described
in more detail under the previous option. (+2)
|
|
|
Sub-ratings
|
+7
|
-2
|
|
Overall rating
|
+5
|
Business cost calculator
10.1 This
section presents the results of the analysis of the cost impact on business of
the various options. In all cases it was assumed that the status quo option
would not impose additional costs on business.
10.2 For
rights issues, the option to require a disclosure document for all fundraisings
including rights issues was assumed to affect 1350 fundraisings in total, based
on previous year information on fundraisings in the Australian capital
markets. Assumptions were made on the average cost of producing a prospectus,
including the cost of legal advice and the preparation of audited financial
statements. The analysis results in a per business cost of $145,000 and a
total cost of $195.75 million. A similar analysis was then performed for
Option C, abolishing the requirement for a prospectus to be provided for rights
issues and substituting instead a requirement for a cleansing notice to be
released to the market. Due to the less onerous legal requirements applying to
cleansing notices the per business cost for this option is estimated to be
approximately $14,000. This option would also only apply to rights issues and
not affect any other forms of fundraisings, resulting in a lower total cost to
industry of $10.2 million.
10.3 With
respects to unlisted company ESSs, the main difficulty lies in estimating the
number of companies that could be affected by the various options. Statistics
provided by an industry association indicate that there are a total of 42,100
unlisted companies that could be affected, of which about 2,500 are assumed to
already have an ESS based on Australian Bureau of Statistics information.Â
Option B would result in extensive relief from the current disclosure and
licensing requirements, and is therefore assumed to lead to a doubling in the
number of companies with an ESS to 5,000. This results in total industry costs
of $267.9 million based on an annual cost per business of approximately $53,580
to set up and run an ESS over 25 years. Option C, which provides limited
relief from the current requirements, the corresponding figures are $260
million based on an annual cost per business of $69,333. Because of the more
restrictive nature of the relief provided, the number of businesses with an ESS
is assumed to grow by 50% to 3,750. The smaller number of businesses assumed
to establish an ESS under Option C results in a lower total cost to industry.Â
However, the annual cost per business is higher than under Option B, reflecting
the more stringent disclosure requirements of this option.
Consultation
10.4 Preliminary
consultation on these measures was undertaken as part of the
April 2006 Corporate and Financial Services Regulation Review
Consultation Paper. Comments received in response to the consultation paper
have been taken into consideration in identifying and examining the options
outlined in this RIS.
10.5 The
majority of the submissions received in relation to rights issues supported the
removal of the obligation to produce a prospectus or PDS for rights issues of
listed entities. The argument generally put forward was that listed companies
are obliged to keep the market informed about significant developments on an
ongoing basis, so that there is little need to require additional disclosure
for a rights issue. One submission from a major accounting firm proposed that
rights issues involving material acquisitions should not be allowed relief from
the obligation to provide a prospectus or PDS. One submission from an
individual stakeholder suggested extending the relief provided to cover rights
issues by overseas listed companies offered into Australia.
10.6 In
addition to the Corporate and Financial Services Regulation Review, the
problems in relation to unlisted company ESSs were considered by a consultation
group originally established by Treasury’s Revenue Group to discuss taxation
aspects of ESSs. Two sessions were held with this group to discuss the impact
of the Corporations Act provisions on unlisted company ESSs. In addition, the
group provided a submission specifying in detail the relief requested in
relation to Corporations Act provisions. Feedback received following the
consultation paper, as well as the views expressed by the consultation group,
were taken into account in identifying and examining the options outlined in
this RIS.
10.7 The
consultation group, which consists mainly of law firms, accounting firms and
specialised consultants that offer advice to companies interested in
establishing an ESS, proposed wide‑ranging relief for unlisted companies
from the relevant provisions of the Corporations Act. The submissions
responding to the consultation paper generally expressed some caution with
respect to this proposal. While acknowledging the merits of ESSs they also
mentioned factors such as the level of risk involved in unlisted companies, the
difficulty of obtaining relevant information and the comparatively low level of
financial sophistication of most employees. While there was some support for
providing relief for unlisted company ESSs, there was also considerable concern
that an appropriate level of investor protection should be maintained.
10.8 A second
round of consultation was held through the release of a Proposals Paper in
November 2006. The proposal for abolishing the requirement for a prospectus or
PDS for rights issues by listed entities was supported by all 14 submissions
which commented on this proposal. One submission wanted to maintain the
prospectus or PDS requirement where the rights issue was conducted in
connection with a material acquisition. This suggestion is not supported since
this information will have to be disclosed under the continuous disclosure
requirements in any case. Other submissions wanted to extend the relief in a
number of ways, including raising the current limit applying to share purchase
plans ($5,000). This suggestion will be brought to the attention of ASIC, as
the current relief in relation to share purchase plans was provided through an
ASIC class order.
10.9 Eleven
submissions were received on the proposals relating to ESSs. All the
submissions supported the proposals, which reflected Option C as set out
above. Several submissions argued that the proposed relief did not go far
enough, and made a variety of suggestions on how they could be extended. It is
unlikely that these suggestions will be accepted, due to the need to maintain
an appropriate balance between providing relief to industry and maintaining an
adequate level of protection for the potential participants in these schemes.Â
A number of technical suggestions were made to facilitate the operation of the
proposals. Due to time pressure these suggestions will not be able to be
considered for implementation at this stage, but may be considered during
further consultations with industry in the future.
10.10 Consultation
on the draft legislation has been limited in scope due to insufficient time
available prior to introduction of the legislation.
Conclusion and recommended option
Rights issues
10.11 With
respect to the problem relating to rights issues in comparison to other
fundraising methods with reduced disclosure requirements, the conclusion is to
recommend Option C.
10.12 Compared
to Option A (the ‘do nothing’ option), Option B imposes heavy additional costs
without contributing sufficient benefits to justify them. These costs are
quantified in the Business Cost Calculator (BCC) analysis provided in section
5.4 and arise from requiring a prospectus for placements, for which there is no
commensurate benefit. While the measure would achieve the stated objective in
removing the bias inherent in the regulations against rights issues, it would
only do so at an excessive cost which could have serious implications for the
development of the equity market.
10.13 Option C
achieves the desired objective of removing the bias against rights issues
without imposing excessive costs on industry and other stakeholders, as can be
seen in the BCC analysis in section 5.4. This is done by requiring an
appropriate level of information to be given to investors, allowing them to
make an informed decision on the merits of the offer, while providing for an
efficient way for companies to make the information available. In the overall
impact assessment provided in section 5.2, Option C is superior to Option B,
but also provides a net benefit compared to Option A, and is therefore the
preferred option.
ESSs for unlisted companies
10.14 In
relation to ESSs for unlisted companies, the conclusion is to recommend Option
C.
Please do not delete the following
section break
Unless otherwise
indicated, items are in Schedule 1 of the
Corporations Legislation Amendment (Simpler Regulatory System) Bill 2007.
|
|
|
|
Part 1, item 1
|
5.71
|
|
Part 1, items 2, 81, 82, 140 and 141
|
5.119
|
|
Part 1, item 3
|
5.76
|
|
Part 1, item 4
|
5.75
|
|
Part 1, item 5
|
5.120
|
|
Part 1, item 6
|
5.80
|
|
Part 1, items 7, 93 and 145
|
5.122
|
|
Part 1, item 8
|
5.123
|
|
Part 1, item 9
|
5.110
|
|
Part 1, item 10
|
5.53
|
|
Part 1, items 11, 15 and 19
|
2.26
|
|
Part 1, items 12 to 14
|
2.24
|
|
Part 1, items 12 to 14 and 16 to 18
|
2.25
|
|
Part 1, items 16 to 18
|
2.23
|
|
Part 1, items 20, 21, 72, 74, 89 and 136
|
5.111
|
|
Part 1, items 24 to 27, 31 and 32
|
2.12
|
|
Part 1, item 28
|
2.17
|
|
Part 1, item 29
|
2.18
|
|
Part 1, item 30
|
2.18
|
|
Part 1, item 32
|
2.13
|
|
Part 1, item 33
|
2.16
|
|
Part 1, items 34 and 35
|
3.19
|
|
Part 1, item 35
|
3.27
|
|
Part 1, item 36
|
2.14
|
|
Part 1, item 37 and item 168
|
2.15
|
|
Part 1, item 38
|
2.42, 2.47, 2.51
|
|
Part 1, item 38
|
2.45
|
|
Part 1, item 39
|
2.68
|
|
Part 1, item 40
|
2.67
|
|
Part 1, item 41
|
2.46
|
|
Part 1, items 42 and 43
|
2.69
|
|
Part 1, item 44
|
3.67
|
|
Part 1, items 45, 46, 49 and 51
|
3.51
|
|
Part 1, item 47
|
3.74
|
|
Part 1, items 48 and 52
|
3.69
|
|
Part 1, item 50
|
3.68
|
|
Part 1, item 53
|
3.70
|
|
Part 1, item 54
|
3.42
|
|
Part 1, item 55
|
3.71
|
|
Part 1, item 56
|
3.34
|
|
Part 1, items 56 and 58
|
3.72
|
|
Part 1, item 57
|
3.41
|
|
Part 1, item 59
|
3.73
|
|
Part 1, items 60 and 61
|
3.62
|
|
Part 1, item 62
|
3.57
|
|
Part 1, item 63
|
3.49
|
|
Part 1, item 64
|
3.50
|
|
Part 1, item 65
|
3.77, 3.78
|
|
Part 1, item 66
|
1.95
|
|
Part 1, item 67
|
3.80
|
|
Part 1, item 68
|
6.13
|
|
Part 1, item 69
|
6.14
|
|
Part 1, item 70
|
5.125
|
|
Part 1, item 71
|
5.59
|
|
Part 1, item 73
|
5.118
|
|
Part 1, items 75 and 76
|
5.61
|
|
Part 1, item 77
|
5.62
|
|
Part 1, item 78
|
5.56
|
|
Part 1, item 79
|
5.65
|
|
Part 1, item 80
|
5.69
|
|
Part 1, item 83
|
5.67, 5.72
|
|
Part 1, item 84
|
5.60
|
|
Part 1, item 85
|
5.63
|
|
Part 1, item 86
|
5.77
|
|
Part 1, items 87, 88, 143 and 144
|
5.112
|
|
Part 1, items 90, 91, 152, 153 and 154
|
5.113
|
|
Part 1, items 92, 131 and 132
|
5.79
|
|
Part 1, item 94
|
5.124
|
|
Part 1, item 96
|
5.58
|
|
Part 1, item 98, paragraph 761G(6)(aa)
|
1.93
|
|
Part 1, item 99
|
1.94
|
|
Part 1, item 100, paragraphs 761GA(a) and (d)
|
1.72
|
|
Part 1, item 100, paragraphs 761GA(b) and (c)
|
1.74
|
|
Part 1, item 100, paragraphs 761GA(e) and (f)
|
1.73
|
|
Part 1, item 100, section 761GA
|
1.71
|
|
Part 1, item 101
|
1.80, 1.82
|
|
Part 1, item 101, subsection 798C(2)
|
1.83
|
|
Part 1, item 101, subsection 798C(3)
|
1.85
|
|
Part 1, item 101, subsection 798C(4)
|
1.84
|
|
Part 1, items 102, 103 and 104, paragraphs 798D(1)(a) and
(b), subsections 798D(4) and (5)
|
1.86
|
|
Part 1, item 105, subsection 798DA
|
1.89
|
|
Part 1, item 105, subsection 798DA(1)
|
1.91
|
|
Part 1, item 105, subsection 798DA(2)
|
1.90
|
|
Part 1, item 105, subsection 798DA(4
|
1.92
|
|
Part 1, item 106
|
5.78
|
|
Part 1, item 107
|
1.110, 1.115
|
|
Part 1, items 108-115
|
1.111
|
|
Part 1, item 116
|
1.112, 1.116
|
|
Part 1, item 117
|
1.67
|
|
Part 1, item 118
|
1.62
|
|
Part 1, items 119-126
|
1.113, 1.117
|
|
Part 1, item 127
|
3.81
|
|
Part 1, item 128
|
3.82
|
|
Part 1, items 129 and 130
|
3.84
|
|
Part 1, item 133
|
5.81
|
|
Part 1, items 134 and 135
|
5.74
|
|
Part 1, item 137
|
5.57
|
|
Part 1, item 139
|
5.70
|
|
Part 1, items 138 and 142
|
5.68
|
|
Part 1, item 142
|
5.73
|
|
Part 1, item 146
|
5.93
|
|
Part 1, item 147
|
5.98
|
|
Part 1, item 148
|
5.95
|
|
Part 1, item 149
|
5.126
|
|
Part 1, item 150
|
5.97
|
|
Part 1, items 151, 155 and 159
|
5.114
|
|
Part 1, items 156, 157 and 158
|
5.127
|
|
Part 1, items 161, 162, 163, 164, 165 and 166
|
5.115
|
|
Part 1, item 167
|
5.116
|
|
Part 1, item 169
|
2.68
|
|
Part 1, item 170
|
6.16
|
|
Part 1, item 171
|
6.17
|
|
Part 1, items 172 and 175
|
5.117
|
|
Part 1, item 173
|
1.92
|
|
Part 1, item 175
|
1.114, 1.118
|
|
Part 1, items 176 to 179 and items 182 to 185
|
2.61
|
|
Part 1, items 180 and 181, and items 186 and 187
|
2.62
|
|
Part 1, items 94 and 146
|
5.88
|
|
Part 1, items 95 and 97
|
1.120
|
|
Part 2, item 188
|
4.23
|
|
Part 2, item 189
|
4.24
|
|
Part 2, item 190
|
4.10
|
|
Part 2, items 191 and 193
|
7.14
|
|
Part 2, item 192
|
7.15
|
|
Part 2, items 194 and 195
|
7.13
|
|
Part 2, item 196
|
7.12
|
|
Part 2, item 197
|
4.19
|
|
Part 3, items 198, 199 and 200
|
2.32
|
|
Part 3, item 203
|
2.34
|
|
Part 3, item 206
|
2.31
|
|
Part 3, item 207
|
7.18
|
|
Part 3, item 208
|
7.9
|
|
Part 3, item 209
|
7.10
|
|
Part 3, item 210
|
5.83
|
|
Part 3, item 211
|
5.87
|
|
Part 3, item 212
|
5.84
|
|
Part 3, item 213
|
5.85
|
|
Part 3, item 214
|
5.121
|
|
Part 3, item 215
|
5.86
|
|
Part 3, item 216
|
1.121
|
|
Part 3, item 217
|
1.122
|
|
Part 3, item 218
|
1.76
|
|
Part 3, item 219
|
1.68
|
|
Part 3, item 221
|
2.38, 2.40
|
|
Part 3, item 222
|
2.66
|
|
Part 3, items 201 and 202
|
2.35
|
|
Part 3, items 204 and 205
|
2.29
|
|
Part 3, items 219 and 220
|
1.119
|
|
Part 4, item 223
|
1.78
|
|
Part 5, items 224, 225 and 226
|
1.79
|
|
Part 6, item 227 and 228
|
5.105
|
|
Part 6, item 229
|
5.100
|
|
Part 6, item 230
|
5.109
|
|
Part 6, item 231
|
2.54
|
|
Part 6, item 232
|
2.53
|
|
Part 6, item 233
|
3.85
|
|
Part 6, item 233(1)
|
2.59
|
|
Part 6, item 233(2)
|
2.50, 2.60
|
|
Part 6, item 233(3)
|
2.50, 2.60
|
|
Part 6, item 234
|
3.86
|
|
Part 6, item 235
|
3.87
|
|
Part 6, item 236
|
3.88
|
|
Part 6, item 237
|
5.102
|
|
Part 6, item 238
|
1.101, 1.108
|
|
Part 6, item 239
|
1.106
|
|
Part 6, item 240
|
4.25
|
|
Part 6, item 241
|
7.17
|
|
Part 6, item 242
|
5.107
|
|
Part 6, item 243
|
1.103
|
|
Part 6, item 244
|
2.57
|
|
Part 6, items 245 and 246
|
1.104
|
|
Schedule 1, item 1, Corporations
(Fees) Amendment Bill 2007Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
|
1.124
|
|
Schedule 1, item 1,
Corporations (Review Fees) Amendment Bill 2007
|
2.70
|
|
Schedule 1, item 2,
Corporations (Review Fees) Amendment Bill 2007
|
2.71
|