AFSL Responsible Manager Courses
Responsible Manager RG 105
What is an Australian Financial Services licence (AFSL)?
You must have an Australian Financial Services Licence to conduct a financial services business. AFS Licensees have a general obligation to provide efficient, honest and fair financial services. You must comply with the conditions of your AFS licence and the Corporations Act 2001.
AFSL Responsible Manager
Responsible Managers are the people that a licensee appoints to demonstrate to ASIC that it has the knowledge, skills and experience required to provide the financial services it is authorised to on its Australian Financial Services licence (AFSL).
A Responsible Manager is a key individual within a business. They can supervise operations in a few ways:
- Oversee the conduct of authorised representatives who trade financial instruments or provide advice
- Be a company director appointed as a responsible manager
- Serve purely as a responsible manager, monitoring licensing compliance and non financial risks.
Explore our Responsible Manager Courses
Questions about your AFSL or compliance requirements?
Check out our Compliance Consultants directory and find experts who can help with those tricky questions.
Responsible Manager Training and Courses
Whether becoming a responsible manager is the next step in your career, you’re being nominated as one, or you need continuing professional development, we have a solution for every stage. Our responsible manager programs provide all you need to know about your roles and responsibilities and the industry regulations licensees must comply with – wherever you are along your RM journey.
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Responsible Manager Fundamentals Course
What responsible managers need to know about their role and responsibilities, and the industry regulations licensees must comply with.Learn More -
Regulation of Australian Financial Services
Designed for those taking on the role of a RM (AFSL) and/or needing a refresher of Australian regulations.Learn More -
AFSL Responsible Manager CPD
ASIC requires that Responsible Managers maintain and update their knowledge and skills to maintain their AFSL.Learn More
Frequently Asked Questions
ASIC doesn’t specify how many CPD hours are required for Responsible Managers of AFS licensees.
However, the CPD must be ‘adequate’ and assist a responsible manager to:
- maintain knowledge and skills that are appropriate for their activities and responsibilities, and are consistent with any applicable training standards
- update their knowledge and skills, especially in areas where there is continual change
- develop new knowledge and skills to assist with their current role or roles contemplated in the near future.
Our AFSL Responsible Manager CPD awards 15 hours/points. This affords licensees flexibility to make up the balance of the widely accepted industry standard of 20 hours via other activities, such as industry reading, inhouse training, and industry event attendance.
RG 105 AFS licensing: Organisational competence is a guide for Australian financial services (AFS) licensees and AFS licence applicants.
This guide describes what ASIC looks for when assessing compliance with the ‘organisational competence obligation’, which is one of the general obligations under s912A(1) of the Corporations Act.
Responsible Managers are the people that a licensee appoints to demonstrate to ASIC that it has the knowledge, skills and experience required to provide the financial services it is authorised to on its Australian Financial Services licence (AFSL).
For information on relevant legislation and important information surrounding your licensing obligations please refer to ASIC’s Regulatory Index.
Are you applying for an AFS Licence? Refer to ASICs AFS Licensing Kit for your obligations.
ASIC Regulatory Guide 105 AFS Licensing: Organisational competence (RG 105), provides detailed information about the requirements of responsible managers under an AFS licence.
For information on relevant legislation and important information surrounding your licensing obligations please refer to ASIC’s Regulatory Index.
A responsible manager possesses the following attributes:
- they must be directly responsible for significant day-to-day decisions in regard to the provision of financial services
- they must meet one of the five options for demonstrating knowledge and skills appropriate to their role, and
- they must be a ‘fit and proper’ person.
Persons likely to be responsible managers within an AFS licensee include:
- executive directors employed in a small to medium business
- managers in a dealing room environment
- business unit heads.
It is important to note that each financial product and service offered by a licensee must be matched by the skills and experience of at least one responsible manager
Our CPD program is an essential annual update for responsible managers and governance, risk and compliance leaders.
- Released annual each year (January – December)
- Contains five topics in alignment with what the regulators are prioritising
- Earns 15 CPD hours/points (3 CPD points per topic).
- Topics are separately assessed so can be studied one at a time, across the year.
- Assessment is via a multiple-choice quiz for each topic.
We see Compliance Consultants as essential to good customer outcomes. Self-licensing is on the rise, ASIC is increasing scrutiny of regulated entities, and numerous legislative changes and other reforms are prompting all manner of financial services firms to seek the assistance of a Compliance Consultant.
Please visit our Compliance Consultants directory.
To get started, either:
- Purchase course/s online. (You can add multiple courses to the cart.)
Please note: Online orders may take up to 1 business day to be processed and for your team to receive their course login details.
OR
Contact us for your Corporate Solution.
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Regulatory News
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10 June 2026
Super stragglers dampen progress on death benefits delivery for grieving Australians
10 June 2026Ongoing weaknesses in the death benefit claims handling practices of straggling superannuation trustees risk undermining confidence in the industry’s readiness to service Australia’s ageing population.
While many trustees have made positive inroads, ASIC’s progress review, Report 831 Delivering on death benefits: Have super trustees stepped up? (REP 831), suggests others have failed to implement basic process improvements in response to recommendations handed down in ASIC Report 806 Taking ownership of death benefits: How trustees can deliver outcomes Australians deserve (REP 806).
ASIC Commissioner Simone Constant said while it was pleasing to see many trustees take appropriate steps to address the claims handling failures identified by ASIC, the pace of improvement and an overall increase in claims volumes suggested not all trustees are well placed to meet future service pressures from Australia’s ageing population.
View ASIC WebsiteSuper stragglers dampen progress on death benefits delivery for grieving Australians
Ongoing weaknesses in the death benefit claims handling practices of... -
10 June 2026
ASIC updates mandatory credit reporting relief
10 June 2026ASIC has amended the mandatory credit reporting relief for credit providers.
ASIC Credit (Amendment) Instrument 2026/64 amends the relief provided under ASIC Credit (Mandatory Credit Reporting) Instrument 2021/541 by introducing an additional category of account that is exempted from reporting.
We have assessed that the relief is operating effectively and continues to form a necessary part of the legislative framework. The relief will now sunset on 1 October 2031.
Consultation and feedback
In November and December 2025, ASIC conducted a targeted consultation with credit providers and industry bodies.
Stakeholders supported extending the relief for five years and expanding the scope to include additional account categories.
Background
Section 133CO of the National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009 sets out the definition of an eligible credit account. Subsection 133CO(2) allows ASIC to determine one or more account which are not eligible credit accounts.
View ASIC WebsiteASIC updates mandatory credit reporting relief
ASIC has amended the mandatory credit reporting relief for credit... -
9 June 2026
ASIC permanently bans former responsible manager Gerard Duffy from providing financial services
9 June 2026ASIC has permanently banned the former responsible manager of Brite Advisors Pty Ltd, Mr Gerard Duffy, from providing financial services, after a finding that ASIC has reason to believe that Mr Duffy is not a fit and proper person.
ASIC permanently bans former responsible manager Gerard Duffy from providing financial services
ASIC has permanently banned the former responsible manager of Brite... -
5 June 2026
APRA publishes Chair John Lonsdale’s Opening Statement to the Senate Economics Legislation Committee
5 June 2026The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has published Chair John Lonsdale’s Opening Statement to the Senate Economics Legislation Committee.
A copy of Mr Lonsdale’s statement is available at: Opening Statement to Senate Economics Legislation Committee – June 2026.
APRA publishes Chair John Lonsdale’s Opening Statement to the Senate Economics Legislation Committee
The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has published Chair John... -
5 June 2026
Ban on the use of adverse genetic tests in life insurance – draft regulations
5 June 2026Give feedback on draft regulations to support the ban on the use of adverse genetic test results in life insurance. The ban comes into effect on 8 October 2026. It stops insurers requesting or using the results when underwriting life insurance policies.
There is an exception where both:
- the policyholder (or their authorised agent or medical practitioner) volunteers the test
- using it improves the policyholder’s or beneficiary’s outcomes.
The draft regulations:
- clarify how the ban applies to certain genetic predispositions
- make the strict liability offence and civil penalty provisions subject to the infringement notice scheme under the Insurance Contracts Act 1984.
Submit your response
You must submit your response on this website.
Before you submit
To help you prepare your response, we recommend that you:
- read the supporting documents
- prepare your response in Word (DOCX or RTF) format, you can also upload PDF files as an alternative
- read our submission guidelines
- read our privacy policy.
You must agree to our privacy collection statement to submit your response.
If you have any issues submitting your response, you can contact us.
Related content
The Australian Parliament passed the ban on 1 April 2026. The ban was informed from previous consultations on:
Ban on the use of adverse genetic tests in life insurance – draft regulations
Give feedback on draft regulations to support the ban on... -
5 June 2026
ASIC proposes to withdraw financial reporting relief for uncontactable members
5 June 2026ASIC is seeking feedback on its proposal to withdraw financial reporting relief for uncontactable members before it expires on 1 October 2026.
We have assessed that ASIC Corporations (Uncontactable Members) Instrument 2016/187 is no longer being used due to changes in the Corporations Act 2001 (Corporations Act).
Sections 110JA and 110F (4A) of the Corporations Act now provide similar relief where a member is uncontactable.
Entities not covered by these requirements may need to apply to ASIC for individual relief aligned with Regulatory Guide 43: Financial reporting and audit relief (RG 43) (if ASIC proceeds with our proposal to withdraw ASIC Instrument 2016/187).
Providing feedback
Stakeholders can send submissions with their feedback to rri.consultation@asic.gov.au by 5pm AEST on Friday 17 July 2026.
View ASIC WebsiteASIC proposes to withdraw financial reporting relief for uncontactable members
ASIC is seeking feedback on its proposal to withdraw financial... -
5 June 2026
Additional Budget Estimates, Opening Statement by ASIC Chair Sarah Court, Senate Economics Legislation Committee, 5 June 2026
5 June 2026Good morning,
This is my first time before a parliamentary committee since taking the role of ASIC Chair on Monday. I want to thank and acknowledge my predecessor, Joe Longo, for his stewardship of ASIC over the last five years. Joe made a significant and lasting contribution to ASIC and our work in serving Australian consumers, investors and markets.
I am joined by Commissioners Alan Kirkland, Kate O’Rourke and Simone Constant, CEO Scott Gregson and Executive Director for Regulation and Supervision, Peter Soros.
ASIC has done a range of important work in recent times. We have strengthened our enforcement stance and taken decisive action against serious misconduct, obtaining record penalties and record sentences, while also advancing key regulatory priorities and helping ensure banks return record amounts to vulnerable Australians.
We drove the landmark ASX inquiry, have significantly contributed to the thinking about public and private markets, and made significant progress with regulatory simplification, highlighting ASIC’s role in helping to enhance productivity and support economic growth.
I look forward to building on this work in the coming years.
Given this is a Budget Estimates hearing I want to give a brief update to the committee on a range of matters, including initiatives funded in last month’s federal Budget. This funding goes to core areas critical to ensuring we continue to engage with everyday Australians while delivering on the key requirements of ASIC.
First, the Government is investing to complete Tranche 2 of the RegistryConnect program to stabilise and uplift ASIC’s business registers. This builds on previous funding and will help us improve online services for company registrations, lodgements, annual reviews, and other transactions, link Director IDs to company records, upgrade registry systems, and implement new functions for company deregistration powers. These registers support millions of everyday decisions including extending credit, verifying a company, entering commercial arrangements or assessing risk.
Second, the Government is investing to strengthen oversight of managed investment schemes. This measure invests in ASIC’s digital capability, improving our tools to access existing non-ASIC government data and enhance supervision of this sector.
While we believe there is no ‘silver bullet’ to these complex issues, better access to data will help us respond to existing and emerging threats, including those highlighted by the First Guardian and Shield matters.
The Government has also committed to funding to improve governance arrangements for registered managed investment schemes and enhance ASIC’s supervision of the sector.
Third, with respect to the First Guardian and Shield matters that we have discussed with the Committee previously, we have continued a range of intensive work with a view to returning money to investors who have lost funds. We are running an extensive communications campaign to ensure that people are alerted to the issues and encouraging AFCA notifications. We currently have 14 proceedings in the Federal Court against 26 defendants relating to these issues. This includes recent action against Equity Trustees for allegedly failing to meet its trustee obligations and not act in members’ best financial interests when onboarding the First Guardian master fund.
This is the second action we have taken against Equity Trustees and the fifth against a super trustee as part of our investigations. It means that ASIC has now commenced proceedings against every super trustee that made Shield or First Guardian available on its platform. This work to date has resulted in the return to investors of more than $400m.
Fourth, this Committee is often interested in ASIC’s criminal work. We have recently seen significant custodial sentences imposed in a number of matters, including the sentence of Anthony Torre to six years in prison for fraud involving the misappropriation of superannuation funds; Remedy Housing officials sentenced for lengthy prison terms for dishonest offences and the misappropriation of customer funds; and Rodney Forrest, sentenced to 5 years and 3 months for insider trading and procuring others to trade in more than $3m of Platinum Asset Management Limited shares. This was the first outcome for our new specialist insider trading team which investigated and finalised the case within 16 months of the offending.
Finally, ASIC has commenced a preliminary investigation into allegations about the conduct of several registered company auditors at KPMG that came to light after whistleblower claims were first aired in the Parliament. Our focus is to determine whether the conduct sanctioned by KPMG may be a breach of the duties of a registered company auditor and whether each of the registered company auditors have maintained their fitness and propriety in accordance with the Corporations Act.
We look forward to taking your questions.
Good morning, This is my first time before a parliamentary... -
4 June 2026
APRA finalises new IRB accreditation pathway for banks
4 June 2026The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has finalised a new, more accessible pathway for banks to become accredited to use the internal ratings-based (IRB) approach to calculate credit risk-weighted assets.
The new pathway has the potential to boost competition while still supporting financial safety by incentivising banks to invest in advanced risk management capabilities. The IRB approach allows banks to better match capital to their actual risk, which can reduce their capital requirements and enable more competitive pricing.
The IRB method is one of two approaches banks can use to calculate risk-weighted assets, which determines the amount of regulatory capital they need to hold for credit risk. While the vast majority of banks use the standardised approach, APRA has approved six of the largest banks to use the IRB approach.1
In a letter to industry published today, APRA confirmed its intention to proceed with plans to make IRB accreditation more attainable for medium-sized banks by making the process more flexible and transparent.
The changes deliver on APRA’s commitment to review and streamline the IRB accreditation process in response to Action 2 of the Council of Financial Regulators’ Review of Small and Medium-sized Banks.
The letter, which includes APRA’s response to submissions, is available at: A new pathway to internal ratings-based accreditation | APRA
Footnotes
1 Banks accredited to use the IRB approach are the four major banks, Macquarie Bank and ING Bank Australia.
APRA finalises new IRB accreditation pathway for banks
The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has finalised a new,... -
4 June 2026
Fashion and beauty retailers trading under the Zara, H&M and Sephora brands pay $596,000 in infringement notices for failing to lodge financial reports on time
4 June 2026ASIC has issued infringement notices to three companies operating major fashion and beauty retail businesses in Australia for allegedly failing to lodge their financial reports by the required date.
Inditex Australia Pty Ltd, which operates and retails under the Zara fashion brand in Australia, has paid an infringement notice of $198,000 for failing to lodge its report for the financial year ending 31 January 2025.
H&M Hennes & Mauritz Pty Ltd, which operates and retails under the fashion brand H&M, paid an infringement notice of $198,000 for failing to lodge its report for the financial year ending 30 November 2025.
Sephora Australia Pty Ltd, a beauty and personal care retailer, paid an infringement notice of $198,000 for failing to lodge its report for the financial year ending 31 December 2024.
The three companies have now lodged all outstanding financial reports.
View ASIC WebsiteASIC has issued infringement notices to three companies operating major... -
4 June 2026
Opening statement to the Economics Legislation Committee
4 June 2026Treasury Secretary Jenny Wilkinson told the Senate Economics Legislation Committee that the ongoing Middle East conflict is creating significant inflationary and growth risks for the global and Australian economies through disruptions to energy supply chains. While Australia’s economy grew by 2.5% over the year to March 2026, Treasury expects growth to slow in 2026-27 as higher fuel costs and broader inflationary pressures weigh on households and businesses. Treasury is closely monitoring the impact on inflation, employment and business conditions, with inflation forecast to peak at around 5% in the June quarter before moderating as supply disruptions ease.
Download
Opening statement to the Economics Legislation Committee
Treasury Secretary Jenny Wilkinson told the Senate Economics Legislation Committee... -
3 June 2026
ASIC updates financial complaints data dashboard
3 June 2026ASIC has updated its Internal Dispute Resolution (IDR) data dashboard to include complaints open, received or closed between 1 July and 31 December 2025, reflecting the most recent data reported by financial firms.
The update also introduces a new complainant demographics page, allowing users to explore complaint trends by age group, gender and location. Complainant demographic data is not shown at the firm-level.
In addition, a downloadable data file is now available, enabling users to extract and analyse selected complaint metrics for reporting and research. This allows users to benchmark performance against industry and identify trends across reporting periods, products, issues and outcomes.
These enhancements aim to improve the transparency, accessibility and usability of IDR data, supporting ASIC’s objective to strengthen accountability and drive improved complaint handling across the financial system.
Further information is available from ASIC’s IDR data reporting page.
Interactive dashboard
ASIC updates financial complaints data dashboard
ASIC has updated its Internal Dispute Resolution (IDR) data dashboard... -
2 June 2026
AFCA opens consultation on Rules change for genetic testing in life insurance
2 June 2026The Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) is opening public consultation on proposed amendments to the rules that govern its work, following changes to genetic testing protections in life insurance.
The consultation, running from 1 June to 26 June, follows a recent legislative change which introduced a ban on life insurers soliciting or using protected genetic information (namely adverse genetic testing results) when offering life insurance.
“These proposed amendments will ensure we can consider complaints about the use of genetic testing in life insurance in line with the new protections for consumers. This will enable AFCA’s Rules to keep pace with changes in the law,” said Michelle Kumarich, Executive General Manager Jurisdiction and Systemic Issues.
AFCA is proposing changes to Rule C.1.4b) and d) to enable it to consider complaints specifically about the use of adverse genetic testing results.
Subject to consultation and regulatory approval, these amendments are expected to take effect from 8 October 2026.
“Engaging with stakeholders through this consultation is essential to ensuring our Rules continue to meet the needs of consumers and financial firms. We encourage all stakeholders, particularly our life insurance members, to have their say during the consultation.”
The Consultation page on the AFCA website provides more information on how to submit a response.
AFCA opens consultation on Rules change for genetic testing in life insurance
The Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) is opening public consultation... -
2 June 2026
APRA finalises FAQ on liquidity treatment of deposits with settlement service providers
2 June 2026The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has released a letter to Minimum Liquidity Holding authorised deposit-taking institutions on the liquidity treatment of deposits placed with settlement service providers (SSPs).
This letter responds to feedback and finalises the FAQ relating to the treatment of deposits placed with SSPs.
The letter to industry is available on the APRA website at: Finalisation of FAQ on treatment of deposits placed with settlement service providers
APRA finalises FAQ on liquidity treatment of deposits with settlement service providers
The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has released a letter... -
1 June 2026
ASIC proposes to consolidate financial reporting and auditing relief instruments
1 June 2026ASIC is seeking further feedback on a proposal to streamline 17 financial reporting and auditing relief instruments into two, as part of our ongoing commitment to regulatory simplification.
The two draft instruments are:
- ASIC Corporations (Annual and Half-year Reporting) Instrument 2026/XXX (the draft Financial Reporting Instrument), and
- ASIC Corporations (Auditing) Instrument 2026/XXX (the draft Auditing Instrument).
The new instruments will make it easier for users to understand available relief and reduce the number of legislative instruments dealing with financial reporting and auditing.
These changes respond to stakeholder feedback received about the consolidation pilot in Report 813 Regulatory simplification (REP 813) and that is outlined in Report 830 Regulatory simplification progress report (REP 830).
Copies of the draft instruments are available at CS 54 Proposed consolidation of financial reporting and auditing instruments.
Providing feedback
Submissions should be sent to rri.consultation@asic.gov.au by 5pm AEST on 10 July 2026.
View ASIC WebsiteASIC proposes to consolidate financial reporting and auditing relief instruments
ASIC is seeking further feedback on a proposal to streamline... -
1 June 2026
CDPP discontinues insider trading charges against Big Un former CFO Andrew Corner following hung jury
1 June 2026The Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (Cth) (CDPP) has determined it will discontinue proceedings against the former chief financial officer (CFO) of collapsed ASX-listed technology company Big Un Limited following a hung jury.
Charges were laid against Andrew Corner in April 2023 but were discontinued by the CDPP after a jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict following a five-week trial ending 30 March 2026.
The CDPP made the decision not to proceed with a re-trial having regard to the Prosecution Policy of the Commonwealth.
Following the CDPP’s decision, ASIC considers the matter finalised.
Background
Further background to Mr Corner’s case is set out in ASIC media release 23-161MR.
Big Un Limited’s former chief executive officer, Richard Evans (formerly Evertz) pleaded guilty in April 2026 to one charge of communicating inside information (26-069MR).
View ASIC WebsiteThe Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (Cth) (CDPP)... -
29 May 2026
APRA imposes additional licence conditions on HTFS Nominees Pty Limited
29 May 2026The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has imposed additional licence conditions on HTFS Nominees Pty Limited (HTFS) to address prudential concerns relating to its investment governance and member outcome frameworks and practices, including oversight of platform investment options made available to super fund members.
HTFS acts as trustee for HUB24 Super Fund which has approximately 165,000 member accounts and over $55 billion in funds under management.
The imposition of additional licence conditions follows APRA’s thematic review of the investment governance, strategic planning and member outcomes practices of superannuation trustees that offer platforms (‘Platform Trustees’). Broadly, the review identified deficiencies in HTFS’s onboarding processes and practices for new investment options, investment option monitoring and reporting, management of conflicts of interest and approach to member outcomes.
Specifically, APRA’s review of HTFS identified concerns in relation to:
- lack of sufficiently rigorous, well-defined and consistently applied investment option selection criteria;
- quality of operational and investment due diligence undertaken for new investment options, including insufficient consideration and management of conflicts of interest and poor documentation;
- design and operational effectiveness of investment option monitoring and reporting frameworks in identifying and responding to performance and risk concerns;
- management of potential conflicts of interest, particularly where key decision-makers hold senior leadership positions within the parent or group, and governance arrangements lack an independent trustee voice; and
- assessment and oversight of member outcomes, including the implementation of controls to minimise potential harm to previously advised members.
Under the additional licence conditions, effective 29 May 2026, HTFS is required to:
- appoint an independent expert to undertake separate reviews of its platform investment menus and frameworks governing investment governance, conflicts management, strategic objectives and member outcomes;
- develop and implement an uplift plan to address identified gaps, and provide APRA with assurance that remediation actions are complete and operating effectively to address those gaps; and
- undertake a further review of its investment menu against the enhanced investment governance requirements to determine ongoing suitability of each investment option.
HTFS must also refrain from onboarding certain new high-risk investment options to its platform until an independent expert confirms the option has gone through an adequate onboarding process and an accountable person attests that all reasonable steps were taken to ensure the option is in members’ best financial interests.
APRA notes HUB24 Limited’s ASX announcement dated 21 April 2026 that it has exercised its option to acquire HTFS from EQT Holdings, subject to regulatory approvals. The licence conditions will apply notwithstanding any change of ownership to HUB24 Limited, which may implement new investment governance and oversight practices for HTFS.
APRA Chair John Lonsdale said: “This is the fifth Platform Trustee that APRA has taken enforcement action against and reflects APRA’s sustained focus on addressing prudential weaknesses identified through our review of Platform Trustees.
“Alongside enforcement action, APRA is closely supervising other in-scope Platform Trustees where improvement is necessary. APRA will continue to oversee the delivery of required actions and will hold trustees to account where they fail to make timely and sustainable improvements to investment governance and member outcomes.
“As part of this ongoing focus, we will also consider whether further enhancements to the relevant prudential standards and guidance are necessary.”
APRA imposes additional licence conditions on HTFS Nominees Pty Limited
The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has imposed additional licence... -
29 May 2026
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services, Opening Statement, 29 May 2026
29 May 2026Opening statement by ASIC Chair Joe Longo at the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services, Inquiry into the Oversight of ASIC, the Takeovers Panel and the Corporations Legislation, public hearing on 29 May 2026.
View ASIC WebsiteParliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services, Opening Statement, 29 May 2026
Opening statement by ASIC Chair Joe Longo at the Parliamentary... -
28 May 2026
APRA maintains current macroprudential policy settings in highly uncertain environment
28 May 2026The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) will keep its macroprudential policy settings steady following its latest review of domestic and international financial conditions and risks.
APRA’s macroprudential policy tools are aimed at mitigating financial stability risks at a system-wide level to promote a safe and stable financial system that enables households and businesses to confidently borrow, save and invest for the future.
APRA has today confirmed that:
- the mortgage serviceability buffer will remain at 3 percentage points;
- the countercyclical capital buffer will remain at 1 per cent of risk-weighted assets; and,
- high debt-to-income (DTI) lending limits remain unchanged, allowing banks to lend up to 20 per cent of new owner-occupied and investment loans at DTI greater than or equal to six times.
In deciding to keep its settings steady, APRA considered the high degree of uncertainty in the operating environment and the impact that the shift in the economic outlook is having on risks to financial stability.
In particular, APRA noted:
- households remain highly indebted. Housing credit growth for the March quarter was strong for investors and around average for owner-occupiers. However, there are signs of moderation in housing price and credit growth. Business credit growth remains above its historical average;
- pressure on household and business cashflows have increased due to higher inflation and interest rates but non-performing loans remain low. Strong buffers mean that most households and businesses are well placed to weather these pressures. The serviceability buffer helps ensure that recent new borrowers can continue to service their loans in the face of higher expenses and interest rates;
- higher risk forms of mortgage lending are contained and lending standards are sound. Based on preliminary March quarter data, high DTI lending remains well below APRA’s DTI limits and so the limits are not restricting overall bank lending. However, this type of riskier lending had been increasing over the past year and – given the uncertainty in the outlook – it is prudent for the limits to remain in place as guardrails for now; and
- the banking system remains well-capitalised and resilient and is well-positioned to absorb shocks should economic conditions deteriorate significantly.
APRA Chair John Lonsdale said that while existing settings remain appropriate for now, the risk landscape is volatile and could evolve rapidly.
“Since APRA’s last update, there has been a shift in the macroeconomic outlook. Interest rates have increased over recent months amid elevated inflation. The conflict in the Middle East is impacting economic and financial conditions in Australia, as higher oil prices add to cost pressures for households and businesses.
“Consumer sentiment and business confidence have weakened and downside risks to economic growth are heightened. Depending on global developments, these impacts could either ease or become more severe in the period ahead.
“At this stage, arrears and non-performing loans remain low and there is no evidence that the banking system is restricting credit supply to preserve capital positions in response to greater anticipated credit losses.
“APRA’s System Risk Outlook, released last week, highlighted that Australia’s financial system is resilient and well-positioned to support our economy in a potential downturn. APRA will remain alert for any early signs of risks materialising that could negatively impact financial stability and will adjust macroprudential settings if needed,” Mr Lonsdale said.
APRA maintains current macroprudential policy settings in highly uncertain environment
The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) will keep its macroprudential... -
27 May 2026
Federal Court orders Westpac to pay $26 million penalty for hardship failures
27 May 2026Westpac Banking Corporation (Westpac) has been ordered to pay $26 million in civil penalties for failing to respond to customers who were facing financial hardship.
The Honourable Justice McEvoy ordered the penalty after finding that Westpac failed to respond to over 200 online hardship requests within the time required by law over nearly six years from 2017 to 2023.
Justice McEvoy said, ‘while the contraventions were not suggested to be deliberate and arose instead from inadequate systems and operational failures, I have accepted that they were grossly negligent’.
The requests were made by customers of Westpac and its subsidiaries St George Bank, Bank SA and Bank of Melbourne – who notified they were experiencing financial hardship and were struggling to meet repayments on products including home loans, credit cards, personal loans and car loans.
ASIC Deputy Chair Sarah Court said the penalty sent a clear message to Westpac and other lenders to step up and do better when responding to customers who ask for help.
View ASIC WebsiteFederal Court orders Westpac to pay $26 million penalty for hardship failures
Westpac Banking Corporation (Westpac) has been ordered to pay $26... -
27 May 2026
ASIC proposes to remake six legislative instruments about managed investment schemes
27 May 2026ASIC is seeking feedback on its proposal to remake legislative instruments that provide relief around managed investment schemes.
Under the proposal, the instruments, which are due to expire on 1 October 2026, will be extended for five years.
The legislative instruments to be remade are:
- ASIC Corporations (Serviced Apartment and Like Schemes) Instrument 2016/869
- ASIC Corporations (Property Rental Schemes) Instrument 2016/870
- ASIC Corporations (Charitable Investment Fundraising) Instrument 2016/813
- ASIC Corporations (School Enrolment Deposits) Instrument 2016/812
- ASIC Corporations (Horse Schemes) Instrument 2016/790, and
- ASIC Corporations (Attribution Managed Investment Trusts) Instrument 2016/489.
ASIC has assessed that these legislative instruments continue to form a necessary and useful part of the legislative framework.
Aside from minor changes to improve clarity and consistency, the content of the instruments will remain unchanged.
ASIC is also proposing to remove transitional provisions that are no longer necessary. This includes the relief in section 6 of ASIC Corporations (Attribution Managed Investment Trusts) Instrument 2016/489. This was intended to assist responsible entities transitioning to the attribution managed investment trust regime.
Providing feedback
ASIC invites feedback on their proposal and questions relating to ASIC Corporations (Horse Schemes) Instrument 2016/790. Submissions are due by 5pm AEST on 24 June 2026 and should be sent to rri.consultation@asic.gov.au.
Refer to CS 53 Proposed remake of six legislative instruments relating to managed investment schemes
ASIC proposes to remake six legislative instruments about managed investment schemes
ASIC is seeking feedback on its proposal to remake legislative...