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[UPDATED] ComCom told clawback periods need to be reduced

The clawback periods of mortgage advisers' commissions should be much shorter and brought more in line with Australian practices, the Commerce Commission has been told.

Speaking at the Commerce Commission's third day of hearings about competition for personal banking services adviser Patricia Marsden said clawbacks should be shorter and more aligned to what happens in Australia.

Commission chairman John Small described the issue as “noisy” and it was the subject of a number of complaints lodged with dispute resolution services.

While some bankers at the hearing said they wouldn't enforce clawback provisions if a customer repaid a loan early because they received some unexpected lump sum such as an inheritance, Marsden challenged that.

Her experience was that banks in New Zealand considered four years to be “short-term” when in Australia the period is more like six to 12 months, Marsden said.

A lot of things can change within four years, from inheritances or death, to matrimonial problems that can mean “having that loan may not be in their best interests,” she said.

But if the adviser is facing a clawback in such a situation, they could be “compromised” in advising the client.

Small said the commission is concerned that some lenders don't warn advisers when a customer switches to another adviser or repays a loan early.

Bank of New Zealand chief executive Dan Huggins said that “it would be very challenging” for his bank to warn advisers in such situations.

Mortgage adviser Jeff Royle told the commission of a case in which one of his clients had been told in writing by a bank that she would incur no charge from repaying a loan early but ended up receiving a bill for $5,500 for doing so, which included a commission clawback.

The hearing also discussed whether advisers should have to tell a client which lenders they were not accredited with, as the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) requires, as well as those that they do have accreditation with. While some advisers present wouldn't object to that, most were not in favour.

- An earlier version of this story included an accurate comment from an ANZ staffer. However the comment related to cash contribution clawbacks, not adviser commission clawbacks.

 

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