Powered by MOMENTUM MEDIA
the adviser logo
Compliance

First ASIC invoices to be issued in January

by Reporter10 minute read
Paper and pen

Regulated entities will be invoiced by ASIC in January 2019 for regulatory services provided by the commission for the 2017/18 financial year.

The cost recovery framework for the Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) will see regulated entities share the costs of ASIC’s regulatory services for their sector.

The framework, outlined in a report released today, identifies industry sectors and provides a methodology for how the levies will be calculated.

According to ASIC, the first invoices will be issued in January 2019 and will recover costs for regulatory services for the 2017/18 financial year.

==
==

Levies will also include a clawback of prior year market supervision expenditure that remains unrecovered as at 30 June 2017:

The report confirms that credit providers (other than small amount credit providers) will be subject to a minimum levy of $2,000, with a graduated charge for every $10,000 of credit providers for amounts over $100 million.

Small amount credit providers will not be subject to a minimum levy.

Credit intermediaries will be subject to a minimum levy of $1,000 and a graduated levy will be charged depending on the number of authorised representatives the intermediary has at 30 June.

Those in the financial advice sector will be subject to a fixed levy of $1,500, with a graduated levy calculated on the number of advisers on the Financial Adviser Register. However, for securities dealers, large securities exchange participants and large futures exchange participants the graduated component will exclude advisers who only provide advice on quoted products, products traded on a foreign financial market or basic banking products

Notably, the report also states that insurance product issuers now includes AFS licensees who make offers to arrange for the issue of insurance products under an intermediary authorisation with an APRA-regulated insurer that does not hold an AFS licence.

These product distributors will be subject to a flat levy.

For insurance product providers, there will be a minimum levy of $20,000 with a graduated levy after $5 million.

ASIC will release the estimated costs for each subsector's leviable activities for the 2017/18 financial year in the Cost Recovery Implementation Statement in October 2017.

ASIC chairman Greg Medcraft commented today: “We are pleased to be able to confirm the framework to help industry prepare for this new regime and thank industry members for their contribution.

“ASIC will continue to support industry to comply with their obligations as they become due. Further details will be provided in a Cost Recovery Implementation Statement later this year.”

[Related: ASIC industry funding model passes Senate]

paper ballpen
magazine
Read the latest issue of The Adviser magazine!
The Adviser is the number one magazine for Australia's finance and mortgage brokers. The publications delivers news, analysis, business intelligence, sales and marketing strategies, research and key target reports to an audience of professional mortgage and finance brokers
Read more