Introductory Info
Date introduced: 9 December 2020
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Treasury
Commencement: Sections 1-3 on Royal Assent; Schedules 1-3 on 1 July 2021.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Financial
Sector Reform (Hayne Royal Commission Response No. 2) Bill 2020 (the Bill)
is to put into effect four of the recommendations of the Royal Commission into
Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry
(Banking Royal Commission).[1]
Structure of
the Bill
The Bill comprises three Schedules:
Background
The Banking Royal Commission was established by Letters
Patent dated 14 December 2017.
The Letters Patent required Commissioner Hayne to inquire
into, and report on, whether any conduct by financial services entities,
including banks and their associated entities, might have amounted to
misconduct and whether any conduct, practices, behaviour or business activities
by those entities fall below community standards and expectations.[2]
The Banking Royal Commission submitted its final report,
containing some 76 recommendations in February 2019.[3]
Importantly, not all of the recommendations required legislative action.
Releasing the Government’s response to the
recommendations, the Treasurer, Josh Frydenberg, stated:
… the Government’s principal focus is on restoring trust in
our financial system and delivering better consumer outcomes, while maintaining
the flow of credit and continuing to promote competition. These objectives are
vitally important to the health of the economy and therefore to the health of
our community.[4]
This Bill is one of a number of Bills which have already
been enacted as a direct response to the recommendations of the Banking Royal
Commission.
Recommendations
addressed |
Relevant legislation |
6.1, 6.2 |
Financial Sector
Reform (Hayne Royal Commission Response—Stronger Regulators (2019 Measures))
Act 2019 |
1.2, 1.3, 4.2, 4.7 |
Financial Sector
Reform (Hayne Royal Commission Response—Protecting Consumers (2019 Measures))
Act 2019 |
1.6, 1.15, 2.7, 2.8, 2.9, 3.1, 3.4, 3.8, 4.1, 4.2, 4.3,
4.4, 4.5, 4.6, 4.8, 6.3, 6.4, 6.5, 6.9, 6.11, 7.2 |
Financial Sector
Reform (Hayne Royal Commission Response) Act 2020 and Corporations
(Fees) Amendment (Hayne Royal Commission Response) Act 2020 |
2.1, 2.2, 3.2, 3.3 |
This Bill |
Committee
consideration
Senate Selection of Bills Committee
At its meeting of 9 December 2020, the Senate Standing Committee
for the Selection of Bills determined that the Bill should not be referred for
inquiry and report.[5]
Senate Standing Committee for the
Scrutiny of Bills
The comments by the Senate Standing Committee for the
Scrutiny of Bills (Scrutiny of Bills Committee) about amendments in Schedule 1
to the Bill which provide for significant matters to be set out in delegated
legislation are canvassed under the relevant heading below.[6]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing this Bills Digest, there have been
no comments by members of non-government parties or independents about the
measures in this Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing this Bills Digest, there have been
no comments by stakeholders about the measures in this Bill.
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible.[7]
Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Human Rights
At the time of writing this Bills Digest the Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights had not commented on the Bill.
Key issues
and provisions
Schedule 1
Harm to be addressed
Nature of payments to financial
advisers
Financial advisers have traditionally been remunerated by
way of commissions received from product providers for placing clients with
particular products, sometimes paid as a percentage of funds under management.[8]
In situations where the client pays a substantial proportion
of the adviser’s remuneration directly (known as ‘fee for service’) it is
common for this remuneration to be ongoing in nature. For example, an adviser
might charge a client an ongoing annual fee calculated as a percentage of the
client’s funds under management (known as an asset-based fee) or a flat dollar
amount. This annual fee generally covers a range of advisory services provided
to (or available to) clients. As opposed to professions or other occupations
that tend to charge for transactional, one-off services or advice, advisers’
remuneration structure is partly reflective of the notion that the benefits of
financial advice tend to be realised over the medium to long-term, and
therefore remuneration structures tend to reflect the ongoing nature of the
adviser-client relationship.
As a result of this unique remuneration structure, in some
situations clients of advisers that pay ongoing fees for financial advice
receive little or no service. Of the clients that do receive a service for the
fees they are paying, some are unaware of the precise magnitude of those fees
(or the fees advisers are receiving from third parties) or they continue paying
ongoing fees as a result of their own disengagement. This is despite the fact
that most ongoing advice contracts allow a client to ‘opt-out’ at any time.[9]
This problem was partially addressed by the enactment of
the Corporations
Amendment (Future of Financial Advice) Act 2012 which inserted the
rules which are currently in operation. However, those rules only applied to
new clients.[10]
ASIC investigations
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) investigated
multiple instances of Australian financial services (AFS) licensees charging
customers fees for annual financial advice reviews where the reviews were not
provided.[11]
ASIC identified two situations in which this arose, being where:
(a) a
customer who has a financial adviser pays fees to receive ongoing advice from
that adviser, but the adviser does not provide the advice or
(b) a
customer who does not have a financial adviser (because, for example, the
adviser departed the advice licensee or retired) is charged a fee for ongoing
advice, which the customer does not receive.[12]
The Banking Royal Commission noted that the relevant
report by ASIC set out the following causes for such conduct being:
- the
financial advice industry had a culture of reliance on automatic periodic
payments such as sales commissions and adviser service fees
- some
advice licensees prioritised advice revenue and fee generation over ensuring
that they delivered the required services
- some
licensees and advisers did not keep adequate records to enable monitoring and
analysis and
- some
licensees did not develop and enforce effective monitoring and checking
procedures to prevent systemic failures.[13]
What the Bill does
Currently, Division 3 of Part 7.7A of the Corporations
Act sets out the rules for charging ongoing fees to clients.
They apply to ongoing fee arrangements—that
is, a financial services licensee gives personal advice to a person as a retail
client and that person enters into an arrangement with the licensee the terms
of which include that a fee is to be paid during a period of more than 12
months.[14]
The fees that are payable under such an arrangement are
called ongoing fees.[15]
A financial services licensee and the representative of a
financial services licensee who enters into an ongoing fee arrangement will be
a fee recipient for the purposes of Part 7.7A.[16]
Fee disclosure statement—timing
Currently a fee recipient must provide a person with a fee
disclosure statement annually and a renewal notice every two years.[17]
Items 18 and 19 in Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Bill repeal these
requirements. Instead, the Bill requires that a client must renew their
arrangements every year. This will be done with a single document—the fee
disclosure statement.
Item 9 in Part 1 of the Schedule 1 to the Bill
repeals and replaces subsection 962G(1) of the Corporations Act so that
a fee recipient must give a client a fee disclosure statement no later than 60
days after the anniversary day for the arrangement each year.[18]
This is a civil penalty provision.
Fee disclosure statements—content
Item 11 in Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Bill repeals
and replaces subsection 962H(1) to require the fee disclosure statement to
include information about fees charged for the previous 12 months as well as
fees to be charged for the upcoming 12 months. The information relating to the
upcoming year must include:
- the
amount of each ongoing fee payable by the client to the fee recipient
- the
services that the client is entitled to receive
- the
amounts of any ongoing fees payable after the end of the upcoming year for a
service provided in that year and
- any
other information that may be prescribed by the Regulations.[28]
If the amount of any ongoing fee cannot be determined, the
fee recipient must provide a reasonable estimate of the fee and a statement
about how it is calculated.[29]
According to the Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill:
A reasonable estimate should be based on all of the relevant
information available to the fee recipient at the time of the estimate, and
reflect their most accurate account of the client’s position at that time. Fee
recipients should factor in information known to them at the time of providing
the estimate such as employer contributions that are expected to be made
throughout the year to a client’s superannuation fund, additional investments
that may be made by a client based on the advice provided and any known large
withdrawals, such as an asset-based fee that the client is being charged.[30]
In addition, the fee disclosure statement must:
- inform
the client that he, or she, may renew the ongoing fee arrangement by notifying
the fee recipient in writing
- state
that the arrangement will terminate if the client does not elect to renew
- advise
that the client is deemed to have elected not to renew if an election to renew
has not been received within the renewal period and
- state
that the renewal period is 120 days beginning on the anniversary
day.[31]
Requirement for consent
Item 24 in Part 1 of
Schedule 1 to the Bill inserts proposed Subdivision C—Consent required for deduction
of ongoing fees from accounts (comprising proposed sections 962R–962W)
into the Corporations Act. Proposed Subdivision C requires
a fee recipient to receive express written consent to deduct, arrange to deduct
or to accept an amount for payment of fees under an ongoing fee arrangement.
The requirement for written consent
applies to accounts that are not linked to a credit card or a basic
deposit product.[32]
Under proposed section 962R of the Corporations Act, the fee
recipient must not deduct the amount of the ongoing fee from the account unless
all of the following are satisfied:
- the
account holder has given his, or her, written consent that amounts may be
deducted in respect of ongoing fees
- if
ASIC has determined, by legislative instrument, (under proposed section 962T)
any requirements for the giving of such consent—it complies with those
requirements and
- at
the time of making the deduction the consent has not been withdrawn, varied (in a way that would not authorise the deduction) or
ceased to have effect.[33]
In addition, if the account holder holds the account
jointly with one or more other persons, no amount may be deducted unless all of
the account holders have given consent.[34]
Proposed
section 962S of the Corporations Act operates where:
- an
ongoing fee is, or will be, payable to a fee recipient under an ongoing fee
arrangement and
- a
person (called the account holder) holds an account with another
person (the account provider) who is not a fee recipient
- the
account is not an account linked to a credit card or a basic deposit product
and
- the
fee recipient proposes to arrange with the account provider for an ongoing fee
to be deducted from the account holder’s account.[35]
In that case, the fee recipient must not arrange for the
account provider to deduct the relevant amount unless:
- the
account holder has given his, or her, express written consent, and that consent
complies with any requirements that have been determined by ASIC
- the
fee recipient has given a copy of the consent to the account provider and
- at
the time that the copy of the consent is given to the account provider it has
not been withdrawn, varied (in a way that would not authorise the deduction) or
ceased to have effect.[36]
The relevant consent must also be obtained from all
persons who hold the account jointly with the account holder.[37]
In addition, a fee recipient must not accept deductions
which have been made unless the relevant consents, as set out above, have not
be withdrawn, varied or ceased to have effect.[38]
Civil penalty and refund orders
The prohibitions set out in proposed subsection 962R(4)
(a fee recipient must not deduct ongoing fees without consent), proposed
subsection 962S(5) (a fee recipient must not arrange for deduction of
ongoing fees without consent) and proposed subsection 962S(8) (a fee
recipient must not accept such deductions) are each a civil penalty provision.[39]
The exception to this general rule is where a fee recipient who has accepted
deductions without the valid consents, repays that amount into the account
holder’s account within 10 business days of the day they were accepted.[40]
Importantly, item 25 in Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the
Bill inserts proposed section 1317GB into the Corporations Act to
provide an additional remedy where there has been a contravention of proposed
subsections 962R(4), 962S(5) or 962S(8). In those
circumstances a Court may order that the fee recipient refund an amount if the
Court is satisfied:
- either:
- the
fee recipient knowingly or recklessly[41]
contravened the requirement that a fee recipient must not deduct ongoing fees
without consent or
- the
fee recipient knowingly or recklessly contravened the requirements that a fee
recipient must neither arrange for deduction of ongoing fees without explicit consent
nor accept such deductions and
- it
is reasonable in all the circumstances to make the order.[42]
This order differs slightly from other orders under the Corporations
Act because a refund order may be made by the Court on its own initiative
during proceedings before it, on application by ASIC, or on the application of
the account holder.[43]
Change to consent
Proposed section 962U of the Corporations Act
permits a person who is an account holder to withdraw or vary
their consent at any time, by notice in writing to the fee recipient.
A fee recipient who receives a notice withdrawing or
varying consent must, within 10 business days of receipt confirm receipt of the
notice in writing to the account holder. In addition, where an account provider
has previously been given a copy of the account holder’s consent, the fee
recipient must give the account provider a copy of the notice withdrawing or
varying consent. This is a civil penalty provision.[44]
Proposed
section 962V sets out the circumstances in which a consent ceases to
have effect. This will generally be at the end of the period of 150 days
after the anniversary day for the ongoing fee arrangement.[45]
In addition, the consent will terminate at the time an ongoing fee arrangement
terminates. Where a new consent is given in relation to the ongoing fee
arrangement an earlier consent will terminate.
If a consent in relation to an ongoing fee arrangement
ceases to have effect, then a fee recipient who had given a copy of the
original consent to an account provider must give written notice of the
cessation to the account provider within 10 business days of the cessation. This
is a civil penalty provision.[46]
Further, item 7 in Part 1 of
Schedule 1 to the Bill inserts proposed section 962FA into the Corporations
Act so that an ongoing fee arrangement terminates if any of the
matters relating to consent in new Subdivision C have not been complied with.
Record keeping
Item 24 inserts proposed
section 962X into the Corporations Act to require a fee
recipient to keep records that will enable the fee recipient’s compliance with
the rules about ongoing fee arrangements to be readily ascertained. Proposed
subsection 962X(2) allows for regulations to specify the records that the
fee recipient must keep as part of the record keeping obligation. Item 35
amends Schedule 3 of the Corporations Act so that the maximum penalty for
contravention of the record keeping requirements is five years imprisonment.
Commenting in relation to these provisions the Scrutiny of
Bills Committee stated that its expectation:
… is that the rationale for the imposition of significant
penalties, especially if those penalties involve imprisonment, will be fully
outlined in the explanatory memorandum. In particular, penalties should be
justified by reference to similar offences in Commonwealth legislation. This
not only promotes consistency, but guards against the risk that liberty of the
person is unduly limited through the application of disproportionate penalties.[47]
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee explained its concerns as
follows:
… significant matters such as recordkeeping obligations which
are subject to significant penalties, as in proposed section 962X, should be
included in primary legislation unless a sound justification for the use of
delegated legislation is provided. In this instance, the explanatory memorandum
contains no justification regarding why it is necessary to allow such
significant matters to be set out in delegated legislation.
From a scrutiny perspective, the Committee is concerned that
the scope and types of records that must be kept in order to comply with the
recordkeeping obligation is not clear on the face of the Bill, with details in
relation to the records that must be kept to instead be set out in delegated
legislation.[48]
That being the case, the Committee has sought further
detailed advice from the Treasurer.[49]
Application
Item 26
in Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Bill inserts proposed Part 10.46 into the
Corporations Act to set out the application and transitional provisions
relating to the amendments in Schedule 1 to the Bill. Within new Part 10.46, proposed
section 1673A provides that the amendments apply in relation to an ongoing fee arrangement entered
into on or after 1 July 2021.
Proposed section 1673B sets out the rules that apply to an
ongoing fee arrangement that is in force immediately before 1 July 2021. In
that case a 12 month transition period—being the period from
1 July 2021 to 30 June 2022—will apply. A fee recipient is required
to give his, or her, clients a fee disclosure statement which complies with the
requirements of the Bill in relation to the ongoing fee arrangement before the
end of the 12 month transition period.
The day that the fee recipient provides the client with a
fee disclosure statement during this period is the anniversary day
for that arrangement in each subsequent year.
Financial implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum, Schedule 1 has
nil financial impact for the Government.[50]
However,
The Office of Best Practice Regulation has agreed to an
estimated average annual compliance cost of $28.4 million for the measures
relating to recommendation 2.1. This includes $11.7 million of upfront costs in
the year of commencement, followed by an annual compliance cost of between
$21.2 million and $33.7 million in subsequent years.[51]
Schedule 2
Harm to be addressed
A financial adviser will contravene subsection 923A(1) of
the Corporations Act if he, or she, uses any of the restricted words or
expressions, being independent, impartial or unbiased, in
relation to the financial services he, or she, provides unless all of
the following are satisfied:
- the
financial adviser does not receive:
- commissions
(other than commissions rebated in full to the client)
- any
form of remuneration calculated on the basis of the volume of business placed
by the adviser with a product issuer
- any
other gift or benefit from a product issuer that may reasonably be expected to
influence the adviser[52]
- neither
the financial adviser’s employer, nor any person on behalf of whom the adviser
provides financial services, receives any of those benefits[53]
- the
financial adviser operates free from direct or indirect restrictions relating
to the financial products in respect of which he or she provides financial
services[54]
and
- the
financial adviser operates without any conflicts of interest that might:
- arise
from his or her associations or relationships with issuers of financial
products and
- be
reasonably expected to influence the adviser in carrying on a financial services
business or providing financial services.[55]
According to the Banking Royal Commission:
At present, there is no requirement for a financial adviser
who does not satisfy those requirements to explain to a retail client that he
or she is not independent. A client may be able to infer that fact from
some of the matters disclosed in a [financial services guide]. In my view,
however, this is not sufficient. A financial adviser who does not meet the
requirements set out above and who provides personal advice to a retail client
should be required to bring that fact to the client’s attention, and to
explain, prominently, clearly and concisely, why that is so. I consider that
disclosure of that kind is likely to be more readily understood by, and
therefore more useful to, a client than the existing requirement merely to
disclose, in general terms, certain information about the providing entity.[56]
What the Bill does
Currently section 941A of the Corporations Act sets
out the obligations of a financial services licensee to give a person who is a
retail client a Financial Services Guide. Under section 942B, the Financial
Services Guide must include, amongst other things:
- information
about the kinds of financial services (the authorised services) that the
providing entity is authorised by its licence to provide, and the kinds of
financial products to which those services relate[57]
- information
about who the providing entity acts for when providing the authorised services[58]
and
- information
about the remuneration (including commission) or other benefits that the
providing entity or related body corporates, directors or employees of the
providing entity are to receive in respect of, or that is attributable to, the
provision of any of the authorised services.[59]
Item 5 in Schedule 2 to the Bill inserts proposed
paragraph 942B(2)(fa) into the Corporations Act to specify
additional matters which are to be included in the Financial Services Guide.
The additional requirements arise if the authorised services include the
provision of personal advice to retail clients, and the providing entity would
contravene subsection 923A(1) by using a restricted word or expression in relation
to such provision of personal advice. In that case the Financial Services Guide
must include a statement:
- that
states that the providing entity is not independent, impartial or unbiased in
relation to the provision of personal advice, and explains the reasons why
- if
any other word or expression has been specified as a restricted word or
expression in regulations, states that the providing entity is not able to
assume or use the restricted word or expression in relation to the provision of
personal advice, and explains the reasons why and
- meets
the requirements (if any) determined in an instrument under proposed subsection 942B(7A).
Item 6 of Schedule 2 to the Bill inserts proposed
subsections 942B(7A) and (7B) into the Corporations Act to empower
ASIC to determine requirements, by legislative instrument, for the purposes of proposed
paragraph 942B(2)(fa). Any such legislative instrument may include matters
such as the form of words to be used for the statement, specific information to
be included in the statement or requirements about the presentation, structure
and format of the statement.
Section 941B of the Corporations Act creates an
obligation on an authorised representative of a financial services licensee to
give a Financial Services Guide to a person as a retail client. Section 942C of
the Corporations Act specifies the main requirements to be included in
the Guide.
Item 7 in Schedule 2 to the Bill inserts proposed
paragraph 942C(2)(ga) into the Corporations Act in equivalent
terms to proposed paragraph 942B(2)(fa) to extend the obligation to
provide additional information in the Financial Services Guide to an authorised
representative of a financial services licensee. Further, item 8 inserts
proposed subsections 942C(7A) and (7B) in equivalent terms to those in item
6 of Schedule 2 to the Bill to allow for the making of a legislative
instrument by ASIC.
Application
Item 9 inserts proposed Part 10.47 into the Corporations Act to set out the application and transitional provisions relating to Schedule 2
to the Bill. Specifically, proposed section 1674 provides that the
amendments made by Schedule 2 apply in relation to a financial service provided
on or after 1 July 2021.
In addition,
proposed section 1674A inserts a transitional rule which operates if a providing entity has given a Financial Services
Guide to the client under section 941A or 941B of the Corporations Act
before 1 July 2021 and will provide a financial service to the client on
or after 1 July 2021. In that case, the providing entity must, before the
financial service is provided, give the client another Financial Services Guide
which complies with the amendments in Schedule 2. In the alternative, the
providing entity may give the client a Supplementary Financial Services Guide
that contains the relevant statement.
Financial implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum, Schedule 2 has
nil financial impact on the Government.[60]
This measure is expected to result in low increases to compliance costs.[61]
Schedule 3
Harm to be addressed
According to the Banking Royal Commission:
One of the key elements contributing to the charging of fees
for no service was the invisibility of the charges made …
… No doubt the trustee of the fund may resort to the funds
held in order to reimburse the trustee for outgoings incurred in the course of
performance of the trust. No doubt the trustee may resort to the funds held to
meet fees owing by members to the trustee under the rules of the fund. Hence
fees like administration fees are properly charged to members’ accounts.
But ongoing service fees payable to an advice licensee or the
authorised representative of an advice licensee are neither outgoings that the
trustee incurs in performance of the trust nor fees charged to members under
the rules of the fund …[62]
Commissioner Hayne considered that the law should not
permit the deduction of advice fees of any kind from a MySuper account stating:
It is difficult to imagine circumstances in which a member
would require financial advice about their MySuper account. If a member wants
financial advice, the cost of that advice should be charged to and paid by the
member directly.[63]
What the Bill does
Currently Part 11A of the Superannuation
Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 (SIS Act) contains the general
fees rules about charging and deducting fees from a superannuation interest.
For instance, Part 11A prohibits the trustee of a regulated superannuation fund
from charging, amongst other things, entry fees[64]
or exit fees.[65]
Superannuation funds often provide financial product
advice to their members. This is referred to as intrafund advice—although
the term is not defined in the SIS Act. The financial product advice can
be general (that is, advice that does not take into account the particular
circumstances of the client) or personal (advice that does take into account
those circumstances).
Section 99F of the SIS Act contains specific
restrictions on the types of personal advice that superannuation trustees can
charge across their membership as intrafund advice. The types of personal
advice for which a superannuation trustee will not be able to charge across the
membership of the fund are those types of advice that are likely to be more
complex in nature and therefore more costly to provide.[66]
Amending the general fees rules
Item 3 in Part 1 of Schedule 3 to the Bill inserts proposed
section 99FA into the SIS Act so that the trustee of a
regulated superannuation fund must not pass on the cost of providing financial
product advice to a member of the fund without the consent of the member. To
that end, proposed subsection 99FA(1) restricts the circumstances in
which intrafund advice may be charged to the following:
- the
cost is to be paid in accordance with the terms of an arrangement entered into
by the member
- the
trustee passes the cost on in accordance with the terms of a written consent of
the member
- if
the arrangement is an ongoing fee arrangement the consent requirements
under Part 7.7A of the Corporations Act have been complied with[67]
- if
the arrangement is not an ongoing fee arrangement the member must explicitly
consent to the trustee passing on the cost of providing financial product
advice to the member and comply with any requirements determined by ASIC under proposed
subsection 99FA(2) and
- the
trustee has the consent or a copy of the consent.
By linking the definition of an ongoing fee
arrangement to Part 7.7A of the Corporations Act, the obligations
which attach to that term will apply to an ongoing fee arrangement under proposed
section 99FA—that is, advisers are required to renew the arrangement
annually,[68]
and outline to the client both the services that will be provided and the fees
that will be charged in the next 12 months.[69]
A failure to comply with these requirements will result in the statutory
termination of an ongoing fee arrangement.[70]
The Bill empowers ASIC to make a determination, by
legislative instrument, about the contents of a consent to a non-ongoing fee
arrangement.[71]
Amending the MySuper charging rules
In addition to the general fees rules in Part 11A, Part 2C
of the SIS Act has specific rules which apply to MySuper products.
Legislation providing for default superannuation products called 'MySuper' was
enacted in 2012.[72]
Since 1 January 2014, only funds offering a MySuper product were eligible to
receive default superannuation contributions relating to new employees.[73]
The MySuper changes were aimed at providing a simple, cost-effective, balanced
product for the vast majority of Australian workers who are invested in the
default option of their current fund. MySuper is a basic fund without unnecessary
features and fees.[74]
Within Part 2C, section 29V of
the SIS Act specifies the fees that may be charged in relation to a
MySuper product.[75] Section 29VA provides that the trustee of a
regulated superannuation fund that offers a MySuper product may only charge a
fee in relation to the MySuper product if the fee is in accordance with the
charging rules.
Part 2 of Schedule 3 to the Bill amends sections 29V and
29VA of the SIS Act so that fees paid by holders of MySuper products
cannot be charged in respect of an ongoing fee arrangement.[76]
According to the Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill:
The amendments are not intended to prevent holders of MySuper
products from accessing financial product advice through their superannuation
account on an ad hoc or once-off basis. The amendments do not prevent a member
accessing multiple instances of one-off advice. However, to ensure that
members’ rights are protected, they need to enter into a new non-ongoing fee
arrangement each time they seek advice.[77]
Application
The amendments in Schedule 3 to the Bill apply at the
following times:
- for
a fee payable under an arrangement entered into on or after 1 July
2021—on and after 1 July 2021 and
- for
a fee payable under an arrangement entered into before 1 July 2021—on
and after 1 July 2022.[78]
Financial implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum, Schedule 3 has
nil financial impact on the Government.[79]
This measure is expected to result in low increases to compliance costs.[80]