News

KiwiSaver providers miss the deadline

Monday 3rd of October 2011

KiwiSaver providers who report for the year to March  had to file their annual reports by last week but despite having nearly six months to prepare, some didn't make it on time.

Elaine Campbell, head of compliance monitoring at the FMA, said that of 44 KiwiSaver schemes with March 31 balance dates, five did not meet the 28 September reporting deadline.

"Of these, we are told two are in the post. The other three are from a single provider, which is keeping FMA informed regarding its reporting progress.

"The provider has experienced delays in producing financial statements that show the segregated nature of the investment funds within each scheme it manages."

Although the FMA did not divulge the identity of the provider having problems with its financial reporting, Good Returns understands the main retail manager to miss the deadline is Aon.

"FMA will treat each case on its merits," Campbell said. "In the event of a serious breach of an issuer's reporting responsibilities, the first step would be to investigate under the FMA Act to identify the issue.

"Consideration could then be given to charges under the Kiwisaver Act, which sets out the penalties for an issuer failing to meet its reporting obligations."

Comments (2)
Clayton Coplestone
My previous claims that Kiwisaver will be the industry’s next "Finance Company debacle" are supported when you read articles like this. I'm unsure why the FMA is "considering" options, when the obvious choice is to close non complying Kiwisaver providers immediately, and redirect the funds to a default provider.
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13 years ago

Murray Weatherston
Why shouldn't a Kiwisaver provider who had failed to meet their reporting requirements be required to withdraw its prospectus and investment statement i.e. be prevented from raising any more money until they fix the breach and tell all their members that (a) they were in breach but (b) they had fixed the breach? Shouldn't the liability to report be a strict liability i.e. there are no merits that should ever be taken into account; miss the deadline means you are off the market. Or is the perpetrator "too big or too important to fail?"
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13 years ago

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