Editorial Cartoon 2.7.14 Photo: David Pope
01-07-2014 09:39 AM - edited 01-07-2014 09:40 AM
AUSTRALIA’S biggest and most trusted financial institution, the Commonwealth Bank, is accused of ripping off its customers and then quite deliberately trying to cover it up.
Even more incredibly, the employee at the centre of the scandal was actually promoted AFTER it was known by senior staff at the bank what he had done.
Accused? Heck, all this is known and admitted by the CBA itself. The only real questions are what the CBA has done to make good for its appalling institutional behaviour and what should be done, if anything, about the CBA itself.
The Senate committee which reported on Friday — with only one dissenting voice — called for a Royal Commission.
....funny thing is what info you don't get if you do a search on the i/net. .......MMmmmmmnnnn
....Which Bank?
Solved! Go to Solution.
on 05-07-2014 03:32 PM
Call me a cynic John, but I'm pretty sure CBA are going to look for any means at their disposal to minimise their losses. They can't very well up their fees or interest rates for potential customers without becoming uncompetitive, so I reckon it's a fair bet they are going to slug existing 'captive' customers. It will probably be done slowly, sneakily in small increments, but I'm pretty sure it will happen.
on 05-07-2014 04:52 PM
Paints, narev should be sacked, almost 8 million a year and still didn't do his job properly - some of the managers and planners involved are still employed by the bank. I hope cormann doesn't get palmers support on the FoFA amendments as Labor and the Greens aren't backing them.
It took the bank's chief executive Ian Narev seven days to come out of the bunker and address the explosive report from the Senate.
His appearance came after significant political pressure from Finance Minister Mathias Cormann, who is trying desperately to save his Future of Financial Advice (FoFA) amendments from a sudden death.
on 05-07-2014 05:03 PM
from FR - "amateurish", a good description of a lot of this govts actions so far.
The Coalition’s amateurish efforts to unwind Labor’s Future of Financial Advice (FoFA) laws have landed it in an awful political mess and bequeathed us a conflicted, contradictory and complex financial system. The new Senate will likely ensure the controversial regulations – which were introduced into Parliament on July 1 without a hint of a media release – will have a short half-life.
The CBA crisis helpfully highlights the problems that can arise when people try to push products while simultaneously offering consumers supposedly independent advice that is in their “best interests”.
The Coalition’s FoFA roll-back insanely enshrines these conflicts between customer-aligned “personal advice” services and the distinct product sales functions within big institutions.
The government has been duped into buying the argument that planners can be rewarded by employers for flogging products – a principle opposed by every planner I know – by the institutions that have bought or legally aligned (via licensing) up to 70 per cent of them. Yet in a post-FoFA world, conflicting planners, most of whom are hard-working, educated and ethical, is a big strategic mistake.
on 06-07-2014 07:14 AM
Greed and arrogance.
on 06-07-2014 10:55 AM
06-07-2014 11:14 AM - edited 06-07-2014 11:17 AM
on 07-07-2014 10:48 AM
CBA, ASIC and the political class: Partners in crime
In the most comprehensive outline of the financial planning scandal anywhere, Dr Evan Jones explains why the Commonwealth Bank was never in danger of a Royal Commission being called into its systematic criminal behaviour.
on 07-07-2014 10:57 AM
more wickedness and evil......but this time through inaction by this govt.
Doing absolutely squiddley dot nothing.