Home / Regulation / Leaders sound consolidated alarm on the rise of consumer harm in financial services

Leaders sound consolidated alarm on the rise of consumer harm in financial services

The financial services minister is looking at tackling scammers at the source: "Does our barista down the corner really need my email address, my bank details, my name and my mobile phone number just to buy a cup of coffee?"
Regulation

The financial services policy leader, Minister Stephen Jones, and the sector’s regulatory head, ASIC chair Joe Longo, delivered a one-two warning punch about the growing prevalence of consumer harm during consecutive speeches to open the regulator’s annual forum in Sydney Thursday morning.

From basic scamming practices to mis-sold products, risky investments and crypto assets, both leaders made clear that consumer harm in financial services is a concern and a priority.

Of particular concern, Longo noted, was that tougher economic conditions were forcing mortgage holders to look outside of mainstream refinancing options, with some turning to less reliable “fringe sources” of credit.

  • “Harmful and predatory credit products and fringe lending practices is a particular area of focus for ASIC,” Longo said. “A key priority must be to protect consumers, especially the most vulnerable.”

    ASIC is targeting credit schemes under its adolescent Design and Distribution laws, which force providers to pick and stick with an appropriate target market. Buy now, pay later providers and small amount credit providers are also under the microscope.

    “We have a range of targeted surveillance projects on foot,” Longo said, noting that ASIC had recently issued 10 stop orders to prevent consumers being targeted by inappropriate products. “We’re focused on sectors where we see consumer harms from poor design or distribution practices.”

    Not just the typically vulnerable

    Directly after Longo’s speech financial services minister Stephen Jones repeated the warning, noting that fraud and scams cost Australian consumers over $2 billion every year. Not all of those are the typical victims, he said.

    “It’s not just the people that we might think of as vulnerable consumers, although they are well represented. You’d be surprised how many stories I get from people very senior in the finance sector saying ‘Me too, I’ve been caught out’.”

    The elderly, the young, people with financial difficulty and low financial literacy are all joined by the well-educated and even corporates in being vulnerable to scams, he said.

    “Yes, there is a vulnerability issue but there’s also just people too busy to check the details,” he said.

    The government will “double down” on corporate responsibility for safeguarding consumers, Jones continued, and try to facilitate a “collaborative arrangement” with industry to tackle the problem.

    Curbing commercial outfits asking for unnecessary information was a simple step in the right direction, he said.

    “We need to ask questions about the extent of data that has been requested at the moment, often for very simple transactions,” Jones said. “Does our barista down the corner really need my email address, my bank details, my name and my mobile phone number just to buy a cup of coffee?”




    Print Article

    Related
    ‘Be prepared to lose all of your money’: Retail investors warned to avoid hype

    Ahead of screenings of a new film about the 2021 GameStop short squeeze, Australians will see a warning about the risks and regulatory perils of social media and market manipulation, part of a new ASIC campaign aimed at preventing ‘dumb money’ losses.

    Lisa Uhlman | 1st Nov 2023 | More
    Rule letting pensioners earn extra $4,000 in income set to go permanent

    The additional income allowance had been set to end in 2024, but the government wants to make it permanent, enabling older Australians to earn nearly $12,000 in annual work income without affecting their pensions.

    Lisa Uhlman | 27th Sep 2023 | More
    Government opens consultation on codifying objective of super

    The bill would require any future legislation affecting superannuation to comport with the objective of preserving savings “to deliver income for a dignified retirement, alongside government support, in an equitable and sustainable way”.

    Lisa Uhlman | 6th Sep 2023 | More
    Popular