ASIC unveils corporate plan for 2022-26

ASIC unveils corporate plan for 2022-26

The national corporate watchdog’s four external strategic priorities are:


Product design and distribution: Reduce the risk of harm to consumers of financial and credit products caused by poor product design, distribution, and marketing, especially by driving compliance with new requirements;
Sustainable finance: Support market integrity through proactive supervision and enforcement of governance, transparency, and disclosure standards concerning sustainable finance;
Retirement decision making: Protect consumers, especially as they plan and make decisions for retirement, focusing on superannuation products, managed investments, and financial advice; and
Technology risks: Focus on the impacts of technology in financial markets and services, drive good cyber-risk and operational resilience practices, and act to address digitally enabled misconduct, including scams. 

Core strategic projects will support these priorities, focusing on sustainable finance practices, crypto-assets, scams, cyber and operational resilience, breach reporting, design and distribution obligations, and subject to the passing of legislation, the Financial Accountability Regime.

Read more: ASIC clarifies retail cover obligations in business insurance

The corporate plan also includes ASIC’s internal change program in line with the four internal strategic priorities, including the corporate watchdog’s investment in technology to become a leading digitally enabled and data-informed regulator. It also details ASIC’s regulatory efficiency initiatives to enhance how it administers the law and engagements and interactions with stakeholders.

ASIC chair Joe Longo said ASIC will take strong and targeted enforcement action to protect consumers and investors and maintain trust and integrity in the Australian financial system.

“ASIC is looking to the longer term and planning over the next four years. But we’ve seen that scenarios can change quickly. We remain alert to changes and developments in our operating and regulatory environment, and we will continue to make rapid, strategic decisions to adapt where needed. When we do so, it will be transparent,” Longo said.

See also  Hurricane Beryl US insurance industry losses could be $750m to $1.2bn: BMS

The release of ASIC’s Corporate Plan 2022-26 follows the corporate regulator’s clarification of retail cover obligations in business insurance and the release of its quarterly enforcement and regulatory update.