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The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) is Australia’s financial regulatory body responsible for overseeing financial markets, investment firms, insurance companies, superannuation funds, and brokers. Its primary role is to ensure that these entities operate within the law, maintain ethical standards, and foster a stable financial system. ASIC operates independently of the Australian government and enforces laws that protect consumers, ensure market integrity, and promote transparency.
ASIC regulates a wide array of financial sectors, including trading platforms, investment services, insurance providers, credit companies, and superannuation funds. Its overarching goal is to promote trust and confidence in the Australian financial system, ensuring that individuals, investors, and businesses have the necessary protection while operating in the market.
ASIC plays a critical role in safeguarding traders and maintaining the integrity of financial markets in Australia. Through strict licensing standards, transparent regulations, and active enforcement, ASIC ensures that brokers and financial firms operate ethically and fairly.
By capping leverage and banning very high-risk products like binary options, ASIC is putting special protection mechanisms in place for non-professional traders. This way, ASIC helps retail traders decrease risk.
Traders in Australia are encouraged to use only ASIC-regulated brokers to benefit from the protections that the regulator provides. With its comprehensive oversight, consumer protection initiatives, and dispute resolution services, ASIC remains one of the world’s most respected financial regulators, dedicated to maintaining market stability and protecting retail investors from harm.
ASIC requires all financial service providers, including trading platforms, forex brokers, and investment firms, to be licensed. This regulation is intended to ensure that only qualified and financially sound firms are allowed to operate. Licensed brokers must follow strict guidelines on managing risks, handling client funds, and complying with transparency standards. These firms are also required to report regularly to ASIC, allowing the regulator to monitor their activities closely.
Traders benefit from knowing that an ASIC-licensed broker operates with a certain level of accountability and credibility. For example, one of the key requirements for a licensed broker is to maintain segregated client accounts. This means traders’ funds must be kept separate from the broker’s operational funds, providing an extra layer of security in case the firm faces financial trouble. (When funds are not segregated, it is much more difficult for traders to get their money back in a bankruptcy hearing, since mixed money may go into the general pot used to pay all claimants.)
ASIC has a history of taking strong enforcement actions to protect traders and maintain market integrity. The Commission is especially prone to enacting restrictions to protect non-professional traders (retail traders), and ASIC has for instance banned brokers from offering and selling binary options to non-professional traders in Australia. Offering CFDs is still permitted, but in 2021, ASIC introduced permanent leverage limits for CFDs to protect retail traders from excessive risk. This action followed a review that revealed high levels of retail investor losses due to leveraged CFD trading. Another example of how ASIC is acting to protect traders is their ongoing commitment to investigating and going after unlicensed brokers and brokers engaging in fraudulent activities. This includes freezing assets, canceling licenses, and taking legal action to ensure consumers are protected.
September 2024 – Macquarie Bank fined 4.995 million AUD
In September 2024, Macquarie Bank Limited was fined a record-breaking 4.995 million AUD for failing to prevent suspicious orders being placed on the electric futures market. This is the largest fine ever imposed by the Markets Disciplinary Panel (MDP).
An ASIC investigation showed that from January to September 2022, Macquire breached market integrity rules on 50 occasions by allowing three of the bank´s clients to place suspicious orders on the electric futures market. Each order was placed within the last minute of market close, which caused it to have an effect on the daily settlement price in a way that was beneficial to the client´s interests in the ASX 24 market for energy derivatives.
Macquarie Bank is the largest market participant in the Australian energy derivatives market, and the record-breaking fine reflects the bank´s serious and prolonged failure to detect and prevent suspected price manipulation.
On multiple occasions, ASIC notified Macquarie Bank about suspicious orders, and the bank not only repeatedly failed to take timely action – it also continued to permit new suspicious orders of the same type.
The suspicious orders were placed during a period when energy supply issues related to the war in Ukraine were causing the global energy markets to experience extreme volatility.
September 2024 – ASIC cancels Prospero Markets AFS license
In September 2024, ASIC cancelled the Australian financial services (AFS) licence for Prospero Markets Pty Ltd; an over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives issuer. Prospero Markets had held an AFS license since 19 December 2012.
On 16 November 2023, ASIC launched an investigation into Prospero, because they suspected that the company had not followed the Corporations Act correctly since 1 March 2021. This investigation came on the heels of Operation Avarus-Nightwolf; an operation where the Australian Federal Police investigated Prospero Markets officers and managers for their possible involvment in money-laundering offences in October 2023 related to the Changjiang Currency Exchange money remitting chain.
The AFS license for Prospero Markets was suspended in December 2023, because Prospero had not lodged its audited financial accounts. Following an application by ASIC in April 2024, the Federal Court ordered the wounding up of Prospero Markets. The license was permanently cancelled effective from 25 September 2024.
In their decision, ASIC specified that Prospeor Markets must continue to be an Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) member until 25 March 2026. Prospero Markets must also continue to have arrangements in place for compensating retail clients until this date, and this includes holding professional indemnity insurance cover.