In brief
Written by Partner Rosannah Healy, Associate Fiona Sam and Lawyer Nicholas Allingham
The Productivity Commission released its draft report on competition in the financial system on 7 February 2018. The PC considers that Australia's prudentially regulated institutions are unquestionably strong, but that prudential stability may have reduced the benefits of competition. The PC makes 25 draft recommendations, a key focus of which are reforms to the regulatory system. A final report is due to the Government by 1 July 2018, following further public consultation. We take you through key issues and recommendations.
PC concerns |
Draft Recommendations |
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Barriers to entry |
Licensing and other regulatory requirements are a significant barrier to entry and expansion in banking, including ADI licensing, restrictions on the use of the word 'bank' and the 15 per cent ownership cap of an ADI's voting shares. |
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Home loans |
Lenders' advertised standard variable rates are not reflective of what the majority of consumers actually pay once discretionary discounts are taken into account. To compare products, consumers require information on the rates that are actually being issued by lenders. |
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There is a high degree of vertical integration in the mortgage broking market, which can create conflicts of interest. |
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The existing disclosure obligations imposed on brokers by the National Consumer Credit Protection Act do not facilitate consumer understanding of the services provided by brokers and the quality of recommended loans. |
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The regulatory capital requirements for residential mortgage loans that apply to the majority of ADIs could be more closely aligned to risk. Increasing the precision of the standardised risk weights is more likely to create the environment for improved competition without detracting from prudential outcomes. |
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SME lending |
Home ownership rates in Australia are decreasing, yet Australia's risk weighting system for SME loans continues to emphasise home ownership. Credit availability could be improved by moving to a more nuanced approach to risk weightings for SME loans that are not secured by a residential mortgage. |
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Payment systems |
In Australia, 'tap and go' facilities at the point of sale default dual network card payments through the higher charge credit card route rather than the lower cost eftpos system. |
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The Payments System Board (PSB) currently regulates the price of 'interchange fees' paid on card transactions by a merchant's financial institution to the customer's institution. However, the justification for interchange fees is not strong – the actual cost of an additional transaction on a card network is negligible. |
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Purchased Payment Facilities (PPFs) or payment methods that use stored value (eg PayPal) have the potential to be a significant source of competition to traditional payment methods, but they face excessive regulation. |
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The New Payment Platform (NPP), owned by 13 initial shareholders, including nine banks, will enable transaction settlement in real time and reduce technical barriers for new financial institutions to enter the payments system. |
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Insurance |
Annual renewal reminders should act as a trigger point for consumers to reconsider their general insurance providers, yet consumers are not switching. |
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Many general insurers provide insurance under multiple brands, which creates the illusion of more competition than actually exists. Consumers need to be aware of who is underwriting an insurance brand and other brands underwritten by the same insurer. |
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Consumer outcomes have generally been poor across add-on insurance markets (ie where the insurance is sold alongside another product). Deferred sales models impose a mandatory time delay into the sales process to separate the purchase of the primary and add-on products and have been introduced overseas to improve consumer outcomes. |
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Mergers and acquisitions |
There has been a high degree of horizontal and vertical integration in the Australian financial system over time. To effectively assess the impacts of integration on market outcomes, regulators require data on the extent of integration. |
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Warehouse funds |
The revised prudential standard for securitisation (APS 120), which came into effect on 1 January 2018, requires banks and other financial institutions providing warehouse funds to hold additional capital against their securities than previously, driving up warehouse costs that are then passed onto those accessing the warehouse facilities. The revised standard takes a 'one size fits all approach' to all lenders accessing warehouse funding, imposing disproportionate costs on non-banks. |
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Improving outcomes for consumers |
There is evidence that consumers do not fully understand the nature of the information provided in 'general advice' under the Corporations Act. The label of 'advice' adds to this confusion. |
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The Productivity Commission previously recommended that consumers have a Comprehensive Right to their consumer data. Open Banking implements significant aspects of the Comprehensive Right but is limited to banking transactions data and does not confer rights in relation to editing data or being informed about the trade or disclosure of data. |
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Reforming the regulators |
There is no one organisation responsible for promoting competition in financial services. One of the existing regulators should be appointed as competition champion. The role is to advocate on competition issues in the financial services market and to lead consideration of the competition impacts of planned regulatory interventions in meetings of the Council of Financial Regulators (CFR). |
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