Banks inquiry: ANZ boss fronts parliamentary hearings

Australia’s third largest bank has seen a 750 per cent increase in breaches by its financial planners, it was revealed in a banking inquiry today.

ANZ CEO Shayne Elliott speaks during the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics annual public hearing at Parliament House in Canberra

ANZ CEO Shayne Elliott speaks during the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics annual public hearing at Parliament House in Canberra Source: AAP

The heads of ANZ are facing a parliamentary hearing into their banking practices in Canberra today.

ANZ CEO, Shayne Elliot, told the committee that the bank has lost 40 employees over the last year due to breaches.

“In terms of financial planners, we've reported 45 financial planners to ASIC recently, 40 of which no longer work with us,” Mr Elliot said.

“Some of them are line dealers as opposed to employees but, yes, they no longer work with us.”

Labor’s Pat Conroy told the committee ANZ had previously stated there had only been six breaches by financial planners in the year before last.

“So, we’ve got a 750 per cent increase in breach reporting in your financial management arm over a 12 month period?,” he asked.

“Yes, that is mathematically correct,” Mr Elliot replied.

“We are raising the standards in which we operate and, as a result of that, when we find problems, we report them,” he said.

CBA boss admits no-one sacked over life insurance scandal

On Tuesday, the CEO of the Commonwealth Bank, Ian Narev, told the parliamentary committee that Australian banks, including the CBA, know they need to do better by their customers.

He's apologised to victims of bad bank behaviour but admits he expects more cases of poor customer outcomes down the track as well as more announcements regarding compensation for those affected.

Mr Narev has fronted a federal inquiry into the banks, run by a parliamentary economics committee made up of ten MPs and senators from Labor, the Greens and the coalition.

"I have personally met with customers whom we have let down. I've done so in order to understand their experiences first hand. I've said before how sorry I am for the pain that we've caused them. I say so again today," Mr Narev told the committee.

“I think today there's still work to do. But I think we're doing a lot better at listening to the cases of individual customers.”

WATCH: CBA boss says no-one sacked over life insurance scandal



Mr Narev has defended huge profits made by the banks and confirmed that no one at the CBA has been sacked for poorly dealing with individual customer cases including rejecting life insurance claims from people with a terminal illness.
“At this stage we have not had individuals terminated as a result of this because we have not seen the need to do that. If we do, we've got very clear principles on it, we will make sure that happens,” he said.

“So no one’s been terminated at the moment involving cases of rejecting terminally ill claims or the others that I've highlighted.”

Mr Narev is the first of four big bank CEOs to front the government-initiated parliamentary inquiry this week.

They are being grilled for three hours each on consumer rip offs, dodgy financial planning advice and unethical behaviour in general within the banking system.

Today, the chair of the House Economics Committee, David Coleman, asked Mr Narev whether the sector would welcome funding a banking tribunal to help curb unethical behaviour within the industry.

Mr Narev replied, “We would be absolutely open to that, we'd be supportive of it.”

Another committee member brought up the issue of incentives for banking staff who sell additional products to customers like life insurance.

Mr Narev defended giving them bonuses as a result.

He told the committee, “what we encourage them to do is engage with their customers, to have conversations about their financial needs, and we're happy to reward them for doing that in a good way.”

Mr Narev was also asked about his own yearly salary to which he responded that his base salary is just over $2.5m.

ANZ CEO, Shayne Elliott will front the inquiry tomorrow, while the NAB's Andrew Thorburn and Westpac's Brian Hartzer are scheduled to appear on Thursday.

Labor, the Greens and some of the independents say the inquiry falls short of the royal commission that victims are calling for given the banking sector has been in the spotlight over a series of financial scandals over the past decade.

Treasurer Scott Morrison said a royal commission was unnecessary.

"I understand why people feel they may want one but you have to look at what's practically going to help people and strengthen the system, that's what we are getting on with," he told Ray Hadley on Sydney's 2GB radio.

Most Australians want a royal commission: poll

The left-leaning Australia Institute has that shows the majority of Australians polled, 68 per cent, agree with calls for a royal commission into the banking sector.

The poll showed only 16 per cent of people were opposed and coalition voters were slightly less likely to support a royal commission than Labor or Greens voters.

Tougher penalties for market manipulation

The hearings come as the Reserve Bank begins the process of rolling out tougher penalties for banks that manipulate the bank bill swap rate, a key benchmark used to price billions of dollars of loans, bills, bonds and derivatives.

about the Reserve Bank's recommendation to put legislation to parliament that would result in jail time for bankers found to be manipulating financial benchmarks.

The legislation will be put to parliament in the new year.

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission is already pursuing three of the four major banks over unconscionable conduct and market manipulation in setting the swap rate from 2010 to 2012.

- with AAP

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5 min read
Published 5 October 2016 8:34am
Updated 5 October 2016 10:57am
By Marija Jovanovic, Myles Morgan


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