Corporations Amendment Regulations 2003 (No. 11) 2003 No. 369
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
Statutory Rules 2003 No 369
Issued by the Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer
Corporations Act 2001
Corporations Amendment Regulations 2003 (No. 11)
Subsection 1364(1) of the Corporations Act 2001 (the Act) provides that
the Governor-General may make regulations prescribing matters required or
permitted by the Act to be prescribed by regulations or necessary or convenient
to be prescribed by such regulations for carrying out or giving effect to the
Act.
The Financial Services Reform Act 2001 (FSRA) commenced on 11 March
2002. It amended the Act to introduce a uniform licensing, conduct and
disclosure regime for financial service providers. Under the FSRA, a two-year
transition period was established to allow time for existing industry
participants to enter the new regime.
To facilitate the transition of industry to the new FSRA licensing regime, the
Financial Services Reform Amendment Act 2003 (FSR Amendment Act) was
passed by the Parliament on 5 December 2003 and will have received the Royal
Assent prior to consideration of the accompanying Minute. The Act makes
technical amendments to the FSRA, to promote certainty, clarifying, where
necessary, various provisions under the regime. Amongst other things, the FSR
Amendment Act allows further regulations to be made for the purposes of the
FSRA. A number of regulations are now to be made to give effect to provisions
introduced by the FSR Amendment Act.
The purpose of the Regulations is to therefore support the reforms to the
regulation of the financial services industry which were implemented in the
FSRA, the FSR Amendment Act and associated legislation.
The Regulations include amendments that:
• list legislation which, if breached by a financial
services licensee, must be reported to the Australian Securities and
Investments Commission;
• specify documents which must contain the licensee's
licence number; and
• remove certain references to repealed regulations
and make amendments to terminology consequential to the FSR Amendment Act.
Details of the Regulations are set out in the Attachment.
Regulations 1 to 3 and Schedule 1 commence on gazettal and Schedule 2 commences
upon the commencement of Schedule 1 to the FSR Amendment Act. Schedule 1 to the
FSR Amendment Act is expressed to commence on the 28th day after
that Act receives the Royal Assent. The deferred commencement of Schedule 2
allows associated and replacement provisions in the FSR Amendment Act to
commence operation.
ATTACHMENT
DETAILS OF THE CORPORATIONS AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2003 (NO. 11)
Regulation 1 provides that the name of the Regulations is the Corporations
Amendment Regulations 2003 (No. 11).
Regulation 2 provides that regulations 1 to 3 and Schedule 1 commence on
gazettal and that Schedule 2 commences upon the commencement of Schedule 1 of
the Financial Services Reform Amendment Act 2003 (FSR Amendment Act).
Regulation 3 provides that Schedules 1 and 2 amend the Corporations
Regulations 2001.
Schedule 1- Amendments commencing on gazettal
Item 1 Obligation to cite licence number in
documents - new regulation 7.6.01C
The FSR Amendment Act inserts a regulation-making power into section 912F of
the Corporations Act 2001 (the Act) to specify the documents which must
include a licensee's Australian Financial Services Licence (AFSL) number. This
is intended to provide certainty over which documents this obligation applies
to, whilst maintaining the intent of the provision to properly identify FSR
licensees when they are providing financial services.
The regulation specifies those FSR-related documents on which the AFSL must be
included. It does not require the AFSL number to be included on periodic
statements until the beginning of the 2004/05 financial year in order to allow
existing stocks of stationery to be depleted.
Item 2 Obligation to notify ASIC of certain
matters - new regulation 7.6.02A
Subsection 912D(1) of the Act requires a financial services licensee to notify
ASIC where it has breached, or is likely to breach, various obligations,
including the obligation to comply with certain financial services laws
(defined in section 761A) that are specified in regulations. Regulation
7.6.02A specifies certain Commonwealth legislation for this purpose.
Item 3 Exemption to notification of authorised
representatives in respect of certain financial products - new regulation
7.6.04A
Under subsection 916F(1AA) of the Act, the appointment of an authorised
representative does not have to be notified to ASIC if the conditions set out
in that subsection are met. One of those conditions is that the representative
is only authorised to provide general advice that relates to, and/or deal in,
financial products specified in the regulations. Regulation 7.6.04A specifies a
general insurance product, a basic deposit product, and a facility for making
Back to Top
non-cash payments that is related to a basic deposit product, for the purposes
of paragraph 916F(1AA)(d) of the Act.
Items 4 and 5 Record of advice given by financial
services licensee or authorised representative - substituted regulations 7.7.05
and 7.7.08
These items amend regulations 7.7.05 and 7.7.08 respectively. The effect of the
amendments is to remove references to regulations (7.8.09 and 7.8.10) that were
repealed in 2002.
Item 6 Combined Financial Services Guide and
Product Disclosure Statement - new regulation 7.7.08A
This regulation lists the circumstances and details under which a Product
Disclosure Statement (PDS) and a Financial Services Guide (FSG) can be provided
as a single document under section 942DA of the Act. The existing content and
presentational requirements that relate to a FSG and PDS apply, including the
requirement for clear, concise and effective presentation.
The regulation distinguishes between situations where the entity providing the
financial service and the product issuer are the same and where the providing
entity is a representative or a related body corporate of the product issuer.
In the latter case, combining the documents would only occur if the product
being issued is a basic deposit product, a non-cash payment facility related to
a basic deposit product, a general insurance product or a life risk insurance
product.
Subregulation (4) states that cross-referencing is allowed between the two
parts of the document so long as this does not result in the document becoming
misleading or deceptive.
Items 7 to 9 Situations in which Statement of
Advice is not required: record of further market-related advice - amendment to
regulation 7.7.09
These items amend regulation 7.7.09 to reflect amendments to section 946B of
the Act made by the FSR Amendment Act. Those amendments replaced references to
`execution-related telephone advice' in section 946B and other provisions of
the Act with the expression `further market-related advice'.
Items 7 and 8 make consequential changes to the heading of regulation 7.7.09
and to subregulation 7.7.09(1). Item 9 amends subregulation 7.7.09(3) to remove
references to regulations 7.8.09 and 7.8.10 that were repealed in 2002.
Item 10 Amendment to the General Advice Warning -
new regulation 7.7.14
The amendment improves the practical operation of the general advice warning
under section 949A. It removes the Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) component
of the warning when no PDS is in fact available.
The general advice warning under section 949A must be given when a person
provides general advice. The warning includes a requirement to consider the
contents of a PDS. However, the FSR Act provides several exemptions from having
to provide a PDS, such as:
• general advice is provided in relation to any
security (other than a warrant); or
• where the client becomes a wholesale client before
the PDS is required to be given; or
• the general advice is in relation to an acquisition
to which sections 1012D or 1012E of the Act apply; or
• the acquisition is made outside Australia.
Item 11 Exception from providing the general
advice warning - new regulation 7.7.20
General advice must be accompanied by the general advice warning found in
section 949A (such as that the advice has not taken the recipient's personal
circumstances into account). The FSR Amendment Act includes a regulation-making
power in subsection 949A to specify situations in which, even though general
advice has been provided, the general advice warning will not have to be
given.
The amendment results in the general advice warning obligation not applying in
the circumstances specified in subregulation 7.7.02(5A). This provides a
limited exemption from providing a Financial Services Guide (FSG) when
advertising in the media or on billboards. This subregulation recognises the
practical difficulties posed in providing required disclosures in lieu of a FSG
in advertising delivered to a wide audience through mass media.
Item 12 Disclosure during hawking of certain
financial products - new regulation 7.8.22A
The information required to be disclosure under regulation 7.8.22A is
consistent with the information required to be given under section 992A of the
Act and the required disclosures under subsection 1012G(3) of the Act and
associated regulations.
Further, consistent with amendments to section 1012G under the FSR Amendment
Act, the amendments provide the regulated person with the ability to tailor the
giving of information, to that requested by the client rather than to provide a
`block' reading of the information contained within a PDS.
Item 13 Repeal of the exemption for trustees of
self-managed superannuation funds lodging an `in use' notice - omission of
regulation 7.9.02C
Regulation 7.9.02C was made on 30 July 2003 as a temporary measure to exempt
trustees of self-managed superannuation funds from the requirement to lodge a
Back to Top
notice with ASIC stating that a Product Disclosure Statement is `in use'
(section 1015D of the Act refers).
The effect of the regulation has been incorporated as an amendment to the Act
as part of the FSR Amendment Act and hence it is no longer required.
Items 14, 16 and 19 to 23 Ongoing disclosure of
material changes and significant events - Division 4B, regulation 10.2.81 and
amendments to Schedule 10A, clause 10.1
The amended regulations are consequential to amendments to section 1017B made
by the FSR Amendment Act.
• Division 4B maintains the circumstances to which
section 1017B applies;
• Regulation 10.2.81 provides transitional
arrangements for product issuers subject to Division 4B; and
• The amendments to Schedule 10A reflect the
amendments to section 1017B imposing obligations on the product issuer rather
than the responsible person.
Item 15 References to responsible person -
omission of Part 7.9 Division 10
The amendment omits Division 10, Part 7.9 as its operation is made redundant by
amendments to section 1017C made by the FSR Amendment Act which imposes
obligations on the product issuer rather than the responsible person.
Item 17 Part 10.2, heading
Item 17 substitutes the heading to Part 10.2 of the regulations with a new
heading that better describes the contents of that Part.
Item 18 Further market-related advice - new
regulation 10.2.214
Item 18 inserts a new regulation 10.2.214 setting out transitional arrangements
in relation to the amendments to section 946B of the Act made by the FSR
Amendment Act.
Those amendments made changes to the requirements relating to the provision of
Statements of Advice in `live' market situations. One of the conditions that
applies to the operation of the amended section 946B is that the providing
entity (ie. a licensee or authorised representative providing personal advice
to a retail client in the circumstances set out in section 946B) must
previously have given the client a Statement of Advice. If the client's
relevant personal circumstances (as defined in section 761A) and the basis on
which the advice contained in that `initial' Statement of Advice do not
significantly change, the providing entity does not thereafter have to give the
client Statements of Advice for subsequent advice which meets the definition of
`further market-related advice'.
The purpose of regulation 10.2.214 is to deal with existing clients of
providing entities to whom section 946B applies. An existing client is defined
in paragraph 10.2.214(1)(b), as a client that had a relationship with the
providing entity at the time:
• if the providing entity is a licensee - when it
obtained its Australian Financial Services Licence (AFSL);
• if the providing entity is an authorised
representative of a licensee - when the licensee on whose behalf the
representative gives further market-related advice obtained its AFSL;
• when the amendments to section 946B contained in
the FSR Amendment Act took effect;
whichever is the latest.
The regulation provides that it will not be a prerequisite to the operation of
section 946B that existing clients receive a Statement of Advice, provided that
such clients have been given `personal securities recommendations' under
section 851 of the Act in force prior to the changes made by the FSR Act (the
old Corporations Act), and the following conditions are met:
• first, such personal securities recommendations
must have been given since the commencement of the FSR Act on 11 March 2002 and
before the time identified in subparagraph 10.2.214(1)(b);
• second, consistent with the criteria contained in
the amended section 946B, the client's investment objectives, financial
situation and particular needs that were taken into account by the providing
entity in giving the personal securities recommendations under section 851 of
the old Corporations Act must not be significantly different to the client's
relevant personal circumstances (which is defined in similar fashion in section
761A to include a person's objectives, financial situation or needs) at the
time further market-related advice is given to the client; and
• third, so far as the basis on which the advice
relates to other matters (that is, matters other than the client's relevant
personal circumstances), the basis on which the last of the personal securities
recommendations was given is not significantly different from the basis on
which the further market-related advice is provided.
If any of these conditions is not met, the providing entity would be required
to give the existing client a Statement of Advice for any further
market-related advice.
Schedule 2 - Amendments commencing on the commencement of Schedule 1 of
theFinancial Services Reform Amendment Act 2003
Item 1 Off market offers for financial products -
omission of regulation 7.1.33C
Schedule 1 of the FSR Amendment Act introduced new provisions to regulate
unsolicited offers to purchase financial products off-market. The introduction
of this legislation results in Regulation 7.1.33C (which introduced disclosure
obligations for unsolicited off-market offers) no longer being required.
To coordinate the omission of this regulation with the introduction of Schedule
1 of the FSR Amendment Act, the omission will not occur until that Schedule
commences.
Item 2 Unsolicited offers to purchase financial
products off-market - new Division 13 and new regulation 7.9.96.
Where a person offers to purchase financial products off-market, Schedule 1 of
the FSR Amendment Act requires disclosure of the market value of that financial
product, in the offer document.
Section 1019J of the FSR Amendment Act requires additional disclosure from
off-market dealers, where the actual market value of the product under offer
varies from the disclosed market value, by a percentage greater than that
specified in the regulations.
Regulation 7.9.96 specifies 50 per cent for the purpose of paragraph
1019J(1)(c) as the trigger for the additional disclosure obligations to
apply.