Insurance Act 1973
No. 76, 1973
Compilation No. 72
Compilation date: 14 October 2024
Includes amendments: Act No. 39, 2024
About this compilation
This compilation
This is a compilation of the Insurance Act 1973 that shows the text of the law as amended and in force on 14 October 2024 (the compilation date).
The notes at the end of this compilation (the endnotes) include information about amending laws and the amendment history of provisions of the compiled law.
Uncommenced amendments
The effect of uncommenced amendments is not shown in the text of the compiled law. Any uncommenced amendments affecting the law are accessible on the Register (www.legislation.gov.au). The details of amendments made up to, but not commenced at, the compilation date are underlined in the endnotes. For more information on any uncommenced amendments, see the Register for the compiled law.
Application, saving and transitional provisions for provisions and amendments
If the operation of a provision or amendment of the compiled law is affected by an application, saving or transitional provision that is not included in this compilation, details are included in the endnotes.
Editorial changes
For more information about any editorial changes made in this compilation, see the endnotes.
Modifications
If the compiled law is modified by another law, the compiled law operates as modified but the modification does not amend the text of the law. Accordingly, this compilation does not show the text of the compiled law as modified. For more information on any modifications, see the Register for the compiled law.
Self‑repealing provisions
If a provision of the compiled law has been repealed in accordance with a provision of the law, details are included in the endnotes.
Contents
Part I—Preliminary
1 Short title
2 Commencement
2A Main objects of this Act
3 Interpretation
3A Certain insurance contracts not taken to be insurance business
4 Meaning of subsidiary
4A Meaning of relevant group of bodies corporate
4B Determining whether bodies corporate are related to one another
5 Application of Act
6 Act extends to external Territories
7 Determination that certain provisions do not apply
7A Breach of condition of a determination
Part II—Administration
8 General administration of Act
Part III—Authorisation to carry on insurance business
Division 1—Need to be authorised
9 Persons other than bodies corporate and Lloyd’s underwriters carrying on insurance business
10 Bodies corporate and Lloyd’s underwriters carrying on insurance business
11 Meaning of general insurer
11A Injunctions
Division 2—Authorisation to carry on insurance business
12 Obtaining an authorisation
13 Conditions on an authorisation
14 Breach of authorisation conditions
Division 3—Revocation of an authorisation
15 Revocation of authorisation etc.
16 When APRA must revoke a general insurer’s authorisation
16A Continuation of effect of general insurer’s authorisation
17 Assignment of liabilities to enable revocation
Division 3A—Transfer and amalgamation of insurance business
17A Interpretation
17B Transfer or amalgamation of insurance business
17C Steps to be taken before application for confirmation
17D Actuarial report on scheme
17E Application to Court
17F Confirmation of scheme
17G Effect of confirmation etc.
17H Costs of actuary’s report
17I Documents to be lodged in case of transfer or amalgamation
Division 4—Authorisation to be a NOHC of a general insurer
18 Authorisation to be a NOHC
19 Conditions on a NOHC authorisation
20 Breach of conditions on a NOHC authorisation
21 When APRA may revoke a NOHC authorisation
22 When APRA must revoke a NOHC authorisation
22A Continuation of effect of body corporate’s NOHC authorisation
23 Publication of list of authorised NOHCs
23A APRA may give notice to ensure that general insurer has an authorised NOHC
Division 5—Directors, senior managers and other representatives of general insurers and authorised NOHCs
24 Disqualified persons must not act for general insurers or authorised NOHCs
25 Who is a disqualified person?
25A Court power of disqualification
26 Court power to revoke or vary a disqualification etc.
26A Privilege against exposure to penalty—disqualification under section 25A or 44
27 APRA may remove a director or senior manager of a general insurer, authorised NOHC or corporate agent
Division 6—Other matters
28 General insurer must hold sufficient assets
28A Commencement and cessation of insurance business
29 Change of name of a general insurer or authorised NOHC
30 General insurer or authorised NOHC ceasing to exist
31 Effect of authorisation as a general insurer
Part IIIA—Prudential supervision and monitoring of general insurers, authorised NOHCs and their subsidiaries
Division 1—The prudential standards
32 APRA may determine prudential standards
34 Notification of prudential standards
35 Obligation to comply with the prudential standards
Division 2—Conversion and write‑off provisions
36A Definitions
36B Conversion and write‑off provisions
36C Conversion or write‑off etc. not grounds for denial of obligations
Division 3—Monitoring of prudential matters
38 APRA to monitor prudential matters
38AA Requirement to notify APRA of certain matters
Division 4—Protections in relation to information
38F Self‑incrimination
Part IV—Auditors, actuaries and accounts
Division 1—The auditors and actuary of a general insurer
39 Requirement for general insurers to have an auditor and actuary
40 Additional auditors
41 Compliance with prudential standards
43 When a person stops holding an appointment
43A Disqualified persons must not act as auditor or actuary of general insurer
44 Court power of disqualification
45 Court power to revoke or vary a disqualification etc.
46 Notification of appointment as an auditor or actuary
48 Referring matters to professional associations for auditors and actuaries
Division 2—Provision of information to APRA
49 Duty of auditors and actuaries to give information when required
49A Additional duty of auditors and actuaries to give information
49B Auditor or actuary may give information to APRA
49D Auditor must notify APRA of attempts to unduly influence etc. the auditor
49DA Giving false or misleading information to auditor
Division 3—Actuarial investigation required by APRA
49E Actuarial investigation of liabilities
49F Offence for contravening section 49E
49G Who can be appointed as a section 49E actuary
49H Delegate’s decision to extend time for providing actuary’s report
Division 4—Role of auditor and actuary of a general insurer
49J Auditor’s role
49K Actuary’s role
49L Lodgment of auditor’s certificate and actuary’s reports
Division 5—Accounts
49Q Keeping of accounting records
Division 6—Removal of auditors and actuaries
49R APRA may direct removal of auditor or actuary
Part V—Investigations of general insurers etc.
50 Interpretation
52 Investigation of general insurer, authorised NOHC or subsidiary by APRA or inspector
54 Entry on premises
55 Powers of APRA or inspector
56 Persons to comply with requirements of APRA or the inspector
57 Person may be represented by a legal practitioner
58 Notes of examination of person
59 Delegation
60 Report of APRA or the inspector
61 Offences
Part VA—Investigations of unauthorised insurance
62A Investigations relating to contraventions of section 9 or 10 etc.
62B Access to premises
62C Powers of APRA or inspector
62D Persons to comply with requirements of APRA or the inspector
62E Person may be represented by a legal practitioner
62F Notes of examination of person
62G Delegation
62H Investigations to be completed within a reasonable time
62J Report of the inspector
Part VB—Judicial management, statutory management, other external administration and winding up
Division 1—Judicial management of general insurers
62K Application for order for judicial management
62L Order for judicial management after investigation
62M Order for judicial management on other grounds
62N Commencement of judicial management
62P Moratorium—effect of judicial management on court and tribunal proceedings
62PA Moratorium—effect of judicial management on enforcement process regarding property
62PB Moratorium—effect of judicial management on disposal of property
62PC Moratorium—Restrictions on exercise of third party property rights
62PD Moratorium—effect of judicial management on supply of essential services
62PE Moratorium—effect of judicial management on annual general meeting
62R Appointment of judicial manager
62S Remuneration of judicial manager
62T Effect of judicial management on powers of officers etc.
62U Effect on external administrator of judicial manager managing general insurer
62V Judicial management not ground for denial of obligations
62W Continued application of other Parts of Act
62X Federal Court’s control of judicial manager
62Y Powers of judicial manager
62Z Judicial manager’s additional powers to facilitate recapitalisation
62ZA Considering report before acting under section 62Z
62ZB Act under section 62Z not ground for denial of obligations
62ZC Application by APRA for instructions to judicial manager
62ZD Request by APRA for information
62ZE Duration of judicial management
62ZF Cancellation of judicial management
62ZG How judicial manager is to manage
62ZH Disclaimer of onerous property
62ZI Report by judicial manager
62ZJ Order of Federal Court on report of judicial manager
62ZK Transfer of business to another general insurer
62ZL Resignation
62ZM Immunity
62ZN Exceptions to Part IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010
Division 1A—Statutory management of general insurers
Subdivision A—General provisions relating to statutory management
62ZOA Consequences of inability or failure of general insurer etc. to meet certain requirements
62ZOB Start of control of body corporate’s business by Insurance Act statutory manager
62ZOC Insurance Act statutory managers—termination of control
Subdivision B—Provisions dealing with control of a body corporate’s business by an Insurance Act statutory manager
62ZOD Insurance Act statutory manager’s powers and functions
62ZOE Safeguards on exercise of Insurance Act statutory manager’s powers and functions
62ZOF Insurance Act statutory manager’s additional powers to facilitate recapitalisation
62ZOG Considering report before acting under section 62ZOF
62ZOH Act under section 62ZOF not ground for denying obligation
62ZOI APRA may require a person to give information etc. for the purposes of this Division
62ZOJ Administrator in control—additional powers to recommend action by APRA
62ZOK Insurance Act statutory manager’s liabilities and duties
62ZOL Transaction by Insurance Act statutory manager not voidable under section 588FE of the Corporations Act 2001
62ZOM Administrator in control—additional duties
62ZON Administrator in control—additional duties where action may affect financial system stability in Australia
62ZOO Termination of Insurance Act statutory manager’s appointment
62ZOP Effect on directors of Insurance Act statutory manager taking control of a body corporate’s business
62ZOQ Effect on external administrator of Insurance Act statutory manager taking control of a body corporate’s business
62ZOR Moratorium—effect of Insurance Act statutory management on court and tribunal proceedings
62ZOS Moratorium—effect of Insurance Act statutory management on enforcement process regarding property
62ZOT Moratorium—effect of Insurance Act statutory management on disposal of property
62ZOU Moratorium—Restrictions on exercise of third party property rights
62ZOV Moratorium—effect of Insurance Act statutory management on supply of essential services
62ZOW Moratorium—effect of Insurance Act statutory management on annual general meeting
62ZOX Insurance Act statutory manager being in control not grounds for denial of obligations
62ZOY Application of other provisions
62ZOZ Costs of statutory management
62ZOZA APRA must report to Minister and publish information about statutory management
62ZOZB Exceptions to Part IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010
Division 2—Extra provisions relating to external administration of general insurers
62ZP Relationship of this Division with Chapter 5 of, and Schedule 2 to, the Corporations Act 2001
62ZQ Involving APRA in proposed appointment of external administrators of general insurers and NOHCs
62ZR Involving APRA in applications by liquidator
62ZS Application by APRA for directions
62ZT APRA may request information from liquidator
Division 3—Extra provisions for winding up general insurers
62ZU Order to wind up general insurer on APRA’s application
62ZV Relationship with the Corporations Act 2001
Division 4—Special provisions relating to foreign general insurers
62ZVA Limited application of Divisions 1, 1A and 2 to foreign general insurers
Part VC—Financial claims scheme for policyholders with insolvent general insurers
Division 1—Preliminary
62ZW Purpose of this Part
62ZX APRA’s functions relating to this Part
62ZY Determination that policies are not protected policies
62ZZ Determination that persons do not have entitlements
62ZZA Allowing extra time for claims
Division 2—Declaration of general insurer
62ZZC Declaration that Division 3 applies in relation to general insurer
62ZZD Advice and information for decision on making declaration
62ZZE APRA may advise Minister of its belief of insolvency
Division 3—Early payment of claims
62ZZF Entitlement to payment of claimant under protected policy
62ZZFA Interim claims and payments for section 62ZZF entitlements
62ZZG Entitlement to payment of third party
62ZZGA Interim claims and payments for section 62ZZG entitlements
62ZZH Entitlement on basis of notionally extended cover
62ZZI APRA must determine insurer’s liability in respect of claim
62ZZJ Determinations APRA must make on application
62ZZK Payment
62ZZKA Giving information about payments in a financial year
62ZZL Substitution of APRA as insurer’s creditor
62ZZM Meeting of entitlement taken to be payment by insurer
62ZZMA APRA may make transferred liabilities determination where transfer of business
62ZZMB Payment amounts under transferred liabilities determination
62ZZMC Consequences of transferred liabilities determination once certificate of transfer issued
62ZZMD Certain provisions do not apply in relation to entitlement of receiving body as a result of transferred liabilities determination
Division 4—Administration
62ZZN APRA to try to ensure awareness of making of claims
62ZZO Requiring assistance
62ZZP Obtaining information relevant to determining and paying entitlements
62ZZQ Enforcing requirement to give information
62ZZR Obtaining further information from claimant or applicant
62ZZS Recovery of overpayments
62ZZT APRA may delegate functions and powers under this Part
62ZZU APRA’s costs of administration
Division 5—Exceptions to Part IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010
62ZZV Exceptions to Part IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010
Part VI—Review of decisions
63 Review of certain decisions
64 Statements to accompany notification of decisions
Part VII—Lloyd’s
Division 1—Preliminary
65 Simplified outline
66 Definitions
Division 2—Security trust fund arrangements
67 Security trust funds
68 Security trust fund arrangements
69 Designated security trust funds
70 Rules about designated security trust funds
71 Transfers to trustee of security trust fund—presumption of regularity
72 When security trust fund constitutes an adequate security for the class of insurance liabilities secured by the fund
73 Affairs of security trust fund
Division 3—General powers of APRA
74 APRA may direct that Lloyd’s underwriters must not issue or renew policies
75 Actuarial investigation of adequacy of security provided by designated security trust funds
76 Provision for liabilities in the accounts of designated security trust funds
Division 4—Investigations
Subdivision A—Inquiries and directions by APRA
77 Inquiries by APRA
78 Direction not to deal with certain assets
Subdivision B—Investigations
79 Investigation of designated security trust fund by APRA or inspector
80 Entry on premises
81 Powers of APRA or the inspector to obtain information etc.
82 Persons to comply with requirements of APRA or the inspector
83 Person may be represented by a legal practitioner
84 Notes of examination of person
85 Delegation
86 Report of APRA or the inspector
Subdivision C—Offences
87 Offences
Division 5—Judicial trusteeship of designated security trust funds
88 Application for order for judicial trusteeship
89 Grounds for order for judicial trusteeship
90 Commencement of judicial trusteeship
91 Stay of proceedings during judicial trusteeship
92 Appointment of judicial trustee
92A Terms and conditions of appointment of judicial trustee
92B Property vesting orders
92C Powers of judicial trustee
92D Court’s control of judicial trustee
92E Direction not to deal with certain assets
92F Provision for liabilities in the accounts of designated security trust funds
92G Application by APRA for instructions to judicial trustee
92H Request by APRA for information
92J Duration of judicial trusteeship
92K Cancellation of judicial trusteeship
92L Report by judicial trustee
92M Judicial trustee may formulate a scheme for the winding‑up or dissolution, or both, of a designated security trust fund
92N Resignation
92P Indemnity
92Q Security deposit
92R Application of security deposit—costs of judicial trusteeship of designated security trust fund
92S Return of security deposit
Division 6—Authorisation of Lloyd’s underwriters
93 Lloyd’s underwriters
Division 7—Miscellaneous
94 Trustee of designated security trust fund not to be treated as carrying on insurance business
94A Injunctions
95 Agent of Lloyd’s
96 Address for service
97 Lloyd’s to give notice of by‑laws
98 Part does not authorise Lloyd’s underwriter to carry on any business the underwriter could not otherwise have carried on
Part VIII—Effect of Act on other laws
99 Operation of State and Territory laws on section 10
100 Act not to affect certain State and Territory laws
102 Laws about accounts or accounting records
103 Parts V and VA not to affect operation of certain laws
Part IX—Directions
Division 1—Recapitalisation directions
103A Who this Division applies to
103B Recapitalisation direction by APRA
103C Additional contents of a recapitalisation direction
103D Compliance with a recapitalisation direction
103E APRA must obtain expert’s report on the fair value of shares etc.
103F Determination of the fair value of shares by an expert
103G Determination of the fair value of rights by an expert
103H Ascertaining the fair value of other capital instruments
103J Contravention of certain provisions does not affect the validity of recapitalisation direction etc.
103K Recapitalisation direction not grounds for denial of obligations
103L Supply of information about issue and revocation of recapitalisation directions
103M Non‑compliance with a recapitalisation direction
103N Exceptions to Part IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010
Division 2—Other directions
104 APRA may give directions in certain circumstances
105 Direction not grounds for denial of obligations
106 Supply of information about issue and revocation of directions
108 Non‑compliance with a direction
Division 3—Secrecy and disclosure provisions relating to all directions
109 APRA may determine that a direction is covered by secrecy provision
109A Secrecy relating to directions
109B Disclosure of publicly available information
109C Disclosure allowed by APRA
109D Disclosure to legal representative for purpose of seeking legal advice
109E Disclosure allowed by APRA Act secrecy provision
109F Disclosure in circumstances set out in the regulations
109G Disclosure for purpose
109H Exceptions operate independently
Part X—Miscellaneous
114 Use of words “insurance” and “insurer”
115 Power to require production of information, books, accounts or documents
115AA Information relating to contraventions of section 9 or 10 etc.
115AB Persons to comply with requirements of APRA or authorised person
115A Access to premises
116 General insurer not to carry on insurance business after start of winding up
116A Assets and liabilities in Australia
117 Address for service in Australia
118 Agent in Australia
120 Saving if section 93 ceases to have effect
121 Service of documents and notices
122 Register to be kept
124 Evidence and judicial notice
125 APRA Act secrecy provisions apply
126 Acceptance and enforcement of undertakings
127 Severability
127A Compensation for acquisition of property
127B Protection from liability—general
127C Protection from liability—directions and secrecy
127D Protection from liability—provisions do not limit each other
127E Act has effect despite the Corporations Act
127F Civil penalty for contravening section 8A of the Terrorism and Cyclone Insurance Act 2003
128 Signing of documents
128A Continuing offences
129 Time for bringing proceedings
129AA Institution of offence proceedings no bar to judicial management or winding up
129A Joinder of charges and penalties for certain offences
129D Injunctions
129E Civil penalties
130 Preparation of forms
131 Costs of investigations
131A Authorising contracts etc. for protecting policyholders’ interests and financial system stability
131B Borrowing funds for payments under authorised contracts etc.
132 Regulations
Schedule 1—Civil penalties
Part 1—Contravention of a civil penalty provision
1 Federal Court may order person to pay pecuniary penalty for contravening civil penalty provision
2 Contravening a civil penalty provision is not an offence
3 Persons involved in contravening civil penalty provision
4 Recovery of a pecuniary penalty
5 Civil evidence and procedure rules for pecuniary penalty orders
Part 2—Civil penalty proceedings and criminal proceedings
6 Civil proceedings after criminal proceedings
7 Criminal proceedings during civil proceedings
8 Criminal proceedings after civil proceedings
9 Evidence given in proceedings for penalty not admissible in criminal proceedings
Endnotes
Endnote 1—About the endnotes
Endnote 2—Abbreviation key
Endnote 3—Legislation history
Endnote 4—Amendment history
An Act relating to Insurance
This Act may be cited as the Insurance Act 1973.
(1) Parts I and II shall come into operation on the day on which this Act receives the Royal Assent.
(2) The remaining provisions of this Act shall come into operation on such date as is, or on such dates as respectively are, fixed by Proclamation.
(1) The main objects of this Act are:
(a) to protect the interests of policyholders and prospective policyholders under insurance policies (issued by general insurers and Lloyd’s underwriters) in ways that are consistent with the continued development of a viable, competitive and innovative insurance industry; and
(b) to promote financial system stability in Australia.
(2) This Act, and the prudential standards determined by APRA under this Act, achieve this mainly by:
(a) restricting who can carry on insurance business in Australia by requiring general insurers, and the directors and senior management of general insurers, to meet certain suitability requirements; and
(b) imposing primary responsibility for protecting the interests of policyholders on the directors and senior management of general insurers; and
(c) imposing on general insurers requirements to promote prudent management of their insurance business (including requirements concerning capital adequacy, the valuation of liabilities, reinsurance arrangements and the effectiveness of risk management strategies and techniques); and
(d) providing for the prudential supervision of general insurers by APRA; and
(e) providing for APRA to manage or respond to circumstances in which the ability of a general insurer to meet its obligations may be threatened; and
(f) providing for certain policyholders to be paid amounts where the financial claims scheme has been declared to apply in relation to a general insurer.
(3) Generally, the provisions of this Act apply to general insurers. However, there are a number of special provisions that apply only to Lloyd’s underwriters.
(1) In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:
accident insurance business means the business of undertaking liability under policies of insurance in respect of the happening of personal accidents (whether fatal or not), disease or sickness or of any class of personal accidents, disease or sickness.
accounting records, in relation to a body corporate, includes invoices, receipts, orders for the payment of money, bills of exchange, cheques, promissory notes, vouchers and other documents of prime entry and also includes such working papers and other documents as are necessary to explain the methods and calculations by which accounts of the body corporate are made up, and such other documents (if any) as are prescribed.
accounts, except in Part VII, means ordinary accounts and statutory accounts.
ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a body corporate that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.
administrator, of a body corporate’s business, means an administrator appointed under subsection 62ZOA(1) to take control of the body corporate’s business.
approved form means (except in section 62ZZKA) a form approved, in writing, by APRA.
APRA means the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority.
APRA member has the same meaning as in the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998.
APRA Special Account has the same meaning as in the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998.
APRA staff member has the same meaning as in the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998.
ASIC means the Australian Securities and Investments Commission.
Australia includes a Territory to which this Act extends.
Australian business assets and liabilities, of a foreign general insurer, has the meaning given by subsection 62ZVA(3).
Australian financial sector statutory manager (or AFS statutory manager) means:
(a) a Banking Act statutory manager (within the meaning of the Banking Act 1959); or
(b) an Insurance Act statutory manager; or
(c) a Life Insurance Act statutory manager (within the meaning of the Life Insurance Act 1995).
authorised NOHC means a body corporate:
(a) authorised under section 18; and
(b) that is a NOHC of a general insurer or general insurers.
authorised person:
(a) except in Part VA, means a person authorised under subsection (1A); or
(b) in Part VA, means APRA, or a person authorised by APRA, in writing, for the purposes of that Part.
barrister or solicitor means a barrister or solicitor of the High Court or of the Supreme Court of a State, or of the Australian Capital Territory or the Northern Territory.
books includes any register or other record of information or any accounts or accounting records, however compiled, recorded or stored, and also includes any document.
business day means a day that is not a Saturday, a Sunday or a public holiday or bank holiday in the place concerned.
charge means a charge created in any way and includes a mortgage or an agreement to give or execute a charge or mortgage, whether upon demand or otherwise.
civil penalty provision: a subsection of this Act (or a section of this Act that is not divided into subsections) is a civil penalty provision if:
(a) the words “civil penalty” and one or more amounts in penalty units are set out at the foot of the subsection (or section); or
(b) another provision of this Act specifies that the subsection (or section) is a civil penalty provision.
corporate agent means a body corporate that is appointed under section 118 as an agent in Australia for the purpose of that section.
data processing device means any article or material (for example, a disk) from which information is capable of being reproduced with or without the aid of any other article or device.
debenture includes debenture stock, bonds, notes and any other document evidencing or acknowledging indebtedness of a body corporate in respect of money that is or may be deposited with or lent to the body corporate, whether constituting a charge on property of the body corporate or not, but does not include:
(a) for the purposes of a particular provision of this Act—a document prescribed for the purposes of that provision; or
(b) for the purposes of this Act generally—a prescribed document.
declared general insurer means a general insurer specified in a declaration under section 62ZZC as a general insurer in relation to which Division 3 of Part VC applies.
direction under this Act means a direction under any of the following provisions:
(a) section 17;
(b) section 27;
(c) section 49R;
(d) section 74;
(e) section 76;
(f) section 78;
(g) section 103B;
(h) section 104.
director, in relation to a body corporate, includes a member of the governing body of the body corporate.
external administrator means any of the following:
(a) a liquidator;
(b) a receiver, manager, managing controller, receiver and manager or other controller (other than a judicial manager or an Insurance Act statutory manager);
(c) a voluntary administrator or administrator of a deed of a company arrangement or a scheme manager.
Expressions used in this definition have the same meanings as they have in the Corporations Act 2001.
Federal Court means the Federal Court of Australia.
Finance Minister means the Minister who administers the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.
Financial Claims Scheme Special Account has the same meaning as in the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998.
financial market has the same meaning as in Chapter 7 of the Corporations Act 2001.
Financial System Stability Special Account means the Financial System Stability Special Account established by section 70E of the Banking Act 1959.
financial year, in relation to a body corporate, has the same meaning as that expression has in relation to a body for the purposes of the Corporations Act 2001 (disregarding Schedule 2 of that Act).
foreign general insurer means a body corporate that:
(a) is a foreign corporation within the meaning of paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution; and
(b) is authorised to carry on insurance business in a foreign country; and
(c) is authorised under section 12 to carry on insurance business in Australia.
friendly society means:
(a) a body that is a friendly society for the purposes of the Life Insurance Act 1995; or
(b) a body that is registered or incorporated as a friendly society under a law of a State or Territory; or
(c) a body that is permitted, by a law of a State or Territory, to assume or use the expression friendly society; or
(d) a body that, immediately before the date that is the transfer date for the purposes of the Financial Sector Reform (Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Act (No. 1) 1999, was registered or incorporated as a friendly society under a law of a State or Territory.
general insurer has the meaning given by section 11.
government entity has the meaning given by subsection 114(5).
holding company, of a body corporate, means another body corporate of which the first body corporate is a subsidiary.
Insurance Act statutory manager has the meaning given by subsection 62ZOA(8).
insurance business means the business of undertaking liability, by way of insurance (including reinsurance), in respect of any loss or damage, including liability to pay damages or compensation, contingent upon the happening of a specified event, and includes any business incidental to insurance business as so defined, but does not include:
(a) life insurance business; or
(b) accident insurance business undertaken solely in connexion with life insurance business; or
(c) pecuniary loss insurance business carried on solely in the course of carrying on banking business and for the purposes of that business by an ADI; or
(d) business in relation to the benefits provided by a friendly society or trade union for its members or their dependants; or
(e) business in relation to the benefits provided for its members or their dependants by an association of employees or of employees and other persons that is registered as an organisation, or recognised, under the Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Act 2009; or
(f) business in relation to a scheme or arrangement under which superannuation benefits, pensions or payments to employees or their dependants (and not to any other persons) on retirement, disability or death are provided by an employer or an employer’s employees or by both, wholly through an organization established solely for that purpose by the employer or the employer’s employees or by both; or
(g) business in relation to a scheme or arrangement for the provision of benefits consisting of:
(i) the supply of funeral, burial or cremation services, with or without the supply of goods connected with any such service; or
(ii) the payment of money, upon the death of a person, for the purpose of meeting the whole or a part of the expenses of and incidental to the funeral, burial or cremation of that person;
and no other benefits, except benefits incidental to the scheme or arrangement; or
(h) business undertaken by a person, being a carrier, carrier’s agent, forwarding agent, wharfinger, warehouseman or shipping agent, relating only to the person’s liability in respect of goods belonging to another person and in the possession, or under the control, of the first‑mentioned person for the purpose of the carriage, storage or sale of those goods; or
(i) business undertaken by a person, being an innkeeper or lodging‑house keeper, relating only to the person’s liability in respect of goods belonging to another person and in the possession or under the control of a guest at the inn or lodging‑house of which the first‑mentioned person is the innkeeper or lodging‑house keeper or deposited with the innkeeper or lodging‑house keeper for safe custody; or
(j) the business of insuring the property of a registered religious institution (within the meaning of the Fringe Benefits Tax Assessment Act 1986) where the person carrying on the business does not carry on any other insurance business; or
(ja) health‑related business within the meaning of section 131‑15 of the Private Health Insurance Act 2007 carried on by a private health insurer within the meaning of that Act through a health benefits fund within the meaning of section 131‑10 of that Act; or
(k) health insurance business within the meaning of Division 121 of the Private Health Insurance Act 2007 carried on by a private health insurer within the meaning of that Act.
Note: Some contracts of insurance may be excluded from this definition under section 3A.
judicial manager means a judicial manager appointed by the Federal Court under section 62R.
life insurance business has the same meaning as in the Life Insurance Act 1995.
liquidator includes a provisional liquidator.
listing rules has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act 2001.
Lloyd’s means the society of that name incorporated by the Act of the United Kingdom known as Lloyd’s Act 1871.
Lloyd’s underwriter means an underwriting member of Lloyd’s.
NOHC or non‑operating holding company, in relation to a body corporate, means a body corporate:
(a) of which the first body corporate is a subsidiary; and
(b) that does not carry on a business (other than a business consisting of the ownership or control of other bodies corporate); and
(c) that is incorporated in Australia.
NOHC authorisation has the meaning given by section 18.
NOHC/NOHC subsidiary has the meaning given by subsection 103A(5).
ordinary accounts means ledgers, journals, profit and loss accounts and balance‑sheets, whether or not prepared for the purposes of any law (including this Act), and includes statements, reports and notes (other than auditors’ reports or directors’ reports) attached to, or intended to be read with, any of the foregoing, but does not include statutory accounts.
pecuniary loss insurance business means the business of undertaking liability by way of insurance against any one or more of the following risks:
(a) risks of loss to the persons insured arising from the insolvency of their debtors or from the failure (otherwise than through insolvency) of their debtors to pay their debts when due;
(b) risks of loss to the persons insured arising from their having to perform contracts of guarantee;
(c) risks of loss to the persons insured attributable to interruptions of the carrying on of business carried on by them;
(d) risks of loss to the persons insured attributable to their incurring unforeseen expense.
personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.
pre‑authorisation liability means a liability, contingent or otherwise, that is assumed (whether in Australia or elsewhere) by a body corporate that, after assuming the liability, becomes authorised under section 12 to carry on insurance business in Australia.
principal auditor, of a general insurer, means an auditor appointed by the insurer under paragraph 39(1)(a).
profit and loss account includes income and expenditure account, revenue account and any other account showing the results of the business of a body corporate for a period.
protected policy means a policy other than:
(a) a policy prescribed by the regulations as not being a protected policy; and
(b) a policy determined under section 62ZY not to be a protected policy.
prudential matters means matters relating to:
(a) the conduct of any part of the affairs of, or the structuring or organising of, a general insurer, an authorised NOHC, a relevant group of bodies corporate, or a particular member or members of such a group, in such a way as:
(i) to keep the general insurer, NOHC, group or member or members of the group in a sound financial position; or
(ii) to facilitate resolution of the general insurer, NOHC, group or member or members of the group; or
(iii) to protect the interests of policyholders of any general insurer; or
(iv) not to cause or promote instability in the Australian financial system; or
(b) the conduct of any part of the affairs of a general insurer, an authorised NOHC, a relevant group of bodies corporate, or a particular member or members of such a group, with integrity, prudence and professional skill.
prudential standard means a standard determined by APRA under section 32.
recapitalisation direction means a direction given by APRA under subsection 103B(1) or (1B).
related body corporate, in relation to a body corporate, means:
(a) in Part V—a body corporate that is related to the first‑mentioned body, as determined in accordance with section 50; and
(b) otherwise—a body corporate that is related to the first‑mentioned body, as determined in accordance with section 4B.
relevant group of bodies corporate has the meaning given by section 4A.
resolution means the process by which APRA or other relevant persons manage or respond to an entity:
(a) being unable to meet its obligations; or
(b) being considered likely to be unable, or being considered likely to become unable, to meet its obligations; or
(c) suspending payment, or being considered likely to suspend payment;
including through the exercise of powers and functions under this Act or another law.
RSA has the same meaning as in the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997.
securities exchange means:
(a) ASX Limited; or
(b) a licensed market (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001) whose licence covers dealing in derivatives; or
(c) any other body (whether in or outside Australia) approved by the Minister as a securities exchange for the purposes of this Act.
senior manager of a general insurer or a corporate agent means a person who has or exercises any of the senior management responsibilities (within the meaning of the prudential standards) for the insurer or agent.
share means a share in the capital of a body corporate, and includes stock.
statutory accounts, in relation to a body corporate, means the reporting documents that the body corporate is required under section 13 of the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 to lodge with APRA.
subsidiary has the meaning given by section 4.
transferred liabilities determination means a determination under subsection 62ZZMA(1).
wind up, in relation to a company, means wind up the company in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001.
yearly statutory accounts, in relation to a body corporate, means the reporting documents that the body corporate is required under section 13 of the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 to lodge with APRA in respect of a financial year.
(1A) APRA may, in writing, authorise an APRA member or an APRA staff member to perform the functions of an authorised person under this Act.
(2) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, give approvals for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of securities exchange in subsection (1).
(4) A reference in this Act to a general insurer having no liabilities in respect of insurance business carried on by it in Australia includes a reference to a general insurer who has assigned, other than by an equitable assignment, all of its interests (including rights and benefits) under all contracts of insurance in respect of insurance business carried on by it in Australia to another general insurer.
(5) Without limiting the scope of what is incidental to insurance business for the purposes of the definition of insurance business in subsection (1), a business of a person is taken, for the purposes of that definition, to be a business incidental to insurance business to the extent that it involves one or more of the following kinds of acts:
(a) inducing others to enter into contracts of insurance with the person as the insurer;
(b) publishing or distributing a statement relating to the person’s willingness to enter into a contract of insurance as an insurer;
(c) procuring the publication or distribution of such a statement.
(5A) Subsection (5) does not apply if the contracts of insurance referred to in that subsection are contracts of reinsurance.
(6) Without limiting the circumstances in which a person is taken, for the purposes of this Act, to carry on insurance business in Australia, a person is taken to carry on insurance business in Australia if:
(a) the person carries on a business outside Australia that, under this Act, would constitute insurance business if it were carried on in Australia; and
(b) another person in Australia acts:
(i) directly or indirectly on behalf of the first‑mentioned person; or
(ii) as a broker of insurance provided by the first‑mentioned person, or directly or indirectly on behalf of such a broker;
in relation to the business carried on outside Australia.
(6A) Subsection (6) does not apply if the business referred to in paragraph (a) of that subsection is solely a business of reinsurance.
(7) In considering for the purposes of this Act whether a person carries on insurance business in Australia, an act of a kind referred to in paragraph (5)(a), (b) or (c) done outside Australia is taken to occur in Australia to the extent that it has, or is likely to have, its effect in Australia.
3A Certain insurance contracts not taken to be insurance business
(1) For the purposes of this Act, insurance business does not include undertaking liability under a contract of insurance, or a kind of contract of insurance:
(a) specified in the regulations for the purposes of this subsection; or
(b) in circumstances specified in the regulations for the purposes of this subsection.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the regulations may specify a contract of insurance, a kind of contract of insurance, or circumstances, by reference to:
(a) particular general insurance products (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001), or particular kinds of such products; or
(b) particular persons, or particular kinds of persons, who are insured under a contract of insurance, or a kind of contract of insurance.
(3) Without limiting subsection (1):
(a) the regulations may specify a contract of insurance, a kind of contract of insurance, or circumstances, by reference to:
(i) a decision of APRA or a person; or
(ii) a certificate or other document issued by APRA or a person; and
(b) if the regulations do so—the regulations may impose obligations on APRA or the person in relation to the decision, certificate or other document.
For the purposes of this Act (except Part V), the question whether a body corporate is a subsidiary of another body corporate is to be determined in the same way as that question is determined for the purposes of the Corporations Act 2001.
4A Meaning of relevant group of bodies corporate
For the purposes of this Act:
(a) a general insurer and its subsidiaries together constitute a relevant group of bodies corporate; and
(b) an authorised NOHC and its subsidiaries together also constitute a relevant group of bodies corporate.
4B Determining whether bodies corporate are related to one another
For the purposes of this Act (except Part V), the question whether a body corporate is related to another body corporate is to be determined in the same way as that question is determined for the purposes of the Corporations Act 2001.
(1) This Act does not apply to State insurance whether or not extending beyond the limits of the State concerned.
(2) This Act does not apply to or with respect to insurance business carried on by:
(a) the Commonwealth (including the Territories); or
(b) a body corporate prescribed by the regulations; or
(c) a body corporate, being insurance business of a kind prescribed by the regulations.
6 Act extends to external Territories
This Act extends to every external Territory.
7 Determination that certain provisions do not apply
(1) APRA may, in writing, determine that any or all of the following provisions of this Act do not apply to a person while the determination is in force:
(a) a provision of Part III (other than a provision of Division 3A of that Part);
(b) section 35;
(c) section 39;
(d) section 41;
(e) a provision of Division 3 or 4 of Part IV;
(f) section 49Q;
(g) section 117;
(h) section 118;
(i) section 120;
(j) section 121.
(2) The determination may:
(a) be expressed to apply to a particular person or to a class of persons; and
(b) specify the period during which the determination is in force; and
(c) be made subject to specified conditions.
(2A) If APRA makes a determination that applies to a particular person, APRA must also give the person written notice of the determination.
(3) APRA may, in writing, vary or revoke a determination under this section.
(4) The following instruments made under this section are not legislative instruments:
(a) a determination that applies to a particular person;
(b) an instrument varying or revoking a determination that applies to a particular person.
(5) Otherwise, an instrument made under this section is a legislative instrument.
(6) Part VI applies to the following decisions made under this section:
(a) a refusal to determine that one or more provisions of this Act do not apply to a particular person;
(b) a decision to impose conditions on, or specify a period in, a determination made under this section in relation to a particular person;
(c) a decision to vary or revoke a determination made under this section in relation to a particular person.
7A Breach of condition of a determination
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person does an act or fails to do an act; and
(b) doing the act or failing to do the act results in a breach of a condition to which a determination in force under subsection 7(1) is subject; and
(c) the determination applies to the person.
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(2) An offence against this section is an offence of strict liability.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 3: If a body corporate is convicted of an offence against this section, subsection 4B(3) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose a fine of up to 5 times the penalty above.
8 General administration of Act
(1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), APRA has the general administration of this Act.
(2) ASIC has the general administration of section 114.
(3) The Minister may give APRA or ASIC directions about the performance or exercise of its functions or powers under this Act.
Part III—Authorisation to carry on insurance business
Division 1—Need to be authorised
9 Persons other than bodies corporate and Lloyd’s underwriters carrying on insurance business
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person carries on insurance business in Australia; and
(b) the person is not a body corporate or a Lloyd’s underwriter; and
(c) there is no determination in force under subsection 7(1) that this subsection does not apply to the person (the effect of which is to allow the person to carry on insurance business without being authorised under the Act to do so).
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(2) An offence against subsection (1) is an offence of strict liability.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
10 Bodies corporate and Lloyd’s underwriters carrying on insurance business
(1) A body corporate (other than a Lloyd’s underwriter) commits an offence if:
(a) the body corporate carries on insurance business in Australia; and
(b) the body corporate is not a general insurer; and
(c) there is no determination in force under subsection 7(1) that this subsection does not apply to the body corporate (the effect of which is to exempt the body corporate from being authorised under the Act to carry on insurance business).
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(2) A Lloyd’s underwriter commits an offence if:
(a) the underwriter carries on any insurance business in Australia; and
(b) the underwriter does so at any time after section 93 has ceased to have effect; and
(c) there is no determination in force under subsection 7(1) that this subsection does not apply to the underwriter (the effect of which is to exempt the underwriter from being authorised under the Act to carry on insurance business).
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(3) An offence against this section is an offence of strict liability.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 3: If a body corporate is convicted of an offence against this section, subsection 4B(3) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose a fine of up to 5 times the penalty above.
A general insurer is a body corporate that is authorised under section 12 to carry on insurance business in Australia.
Note: General insurer includes a foreign general insurer (see the definition of foreign general insurer in subsection 3(1)).
Restraining injunctions
(1) If a person has engaged, is engaging or is proposing to engage, in conduct that constituted, constitutes or would constitute:
(a) a contravention of section 9 or 10; or
(b) attempting to contravene section 9 or 10; or
(c) aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring a person to contravene section 9 or 10; or
(d) inducing or attempting to induce, whether by threats, promises or otherwise, a person to contravene section 9 or 10; or
(e) being in any way, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in, or party to, the contravention by a person of section 9 or 10; or
(f) conspiring with others to contravene section 9 or 10;
the Federal Court may, on the application of APRA or a person whose interests have been, are or would be affected by the conduct, grant an injunction in accordance with subsection (2).
(2) The injunction:
(a) may restrain the person from engaging in the conduct; and
(b) may also require that person to do a particular act or thing, if the Court thinks it desirable to do so.
The Court may grant the injunction on such terms as it thinks appropriate.
(3) The power of the Court to grant an injunction restraining a person from engaging in conduct may be exercised:
(a) whether or not it appears to the Court that the person intends to engage again, or to continue to engage, in conduct of that kind; and
(b) whether or not the person has previously engaged in conduct of that kind; and
(c) whether or not there is an imminent danger of substantial damage to any other person if the person engages in conduct of that kind.
Interim injunctions
(4) The Court may grant an interim injunction pending determination of an application under subsection (1) if in the Court’s opinion it is desirable to do so.
Consent injunctions
(5) If an application for an injunction under subsection (1) has been made, the Court may, if the Court thinks it appropriate, grant an injunction by consent of all the parties to the proceedings, whether or not the Court is satisfied that the subsection applies.
Variation or discharge of injunctions
(6) The Court may discharge or vary an injunction granted under subsection (1) or (5).
Damages undertakings
(7) APRA cannot be required, as a condition of granting an interim injunction, to give an undertaking as to damages.
Damages orders
(8) If the Court has power under this section to grant an injunction restraining a person from engaging in particular conduct, or requiring a person to do a particular act or thing, the Court may, either in addition to or in substitution for the grant of the injunction, order that person to pay damages to any other person.
Federal Court’s other powers unaffected
(9) The powers conferred on the Court by this section are in addition to any other of its powers, and do not derogate from its other powers.
Division 2—Authorisation to carry on insurance business
(1) A body corporate may apply in writing to APRA for an authorisation to carry on insurance business in Australia.
Note: The body corporate may also need to consider the implications of the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975, the Financial Sector (Shareholdings) Act 1998 and the Insurance Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1991.
(1A) APRA may require the body corporate to provide a statutory declaration in relation to information or documents provided in relation to the application.
(1B) APRA may, by legislative instrument, set criteria for the authorisation of a body corporate to carry on insurance business in Australia.
(2) APRA may authorise an applicant to carry on insurance business in Australia. The authorisation must be in writing.
(3) Without limiting the circumstances in which APRA may refuse an application, APRA may refuse an application if the applicant is a subsidiary of another body corporate that is not an authorised NOHC.
(3A) Without limiting the circumstances in which APRA may refuse an application, APRA must refuse an application if:
(a) an arrangement under which medical indemnity cover is provided for a health care professional was entered into before 1 July 2003; and
(b) the arrangement was not effected by means of a contract of insurance; and
(c) the applicant may pay, or may have to pay, an amount under the arrangement at some time after the time when the application is made.
Expressions used in paragraph (a) have the same meaning as they have in the Medical Indemnity (Prudential Supervision and Product Standards) Act 2003.
Note 1: This means that an applicant that is an MDO (medical defence organisation) that entered into discretionary medical indemnity arrangements before 1 July 2003 cannot be granted an authorisation under this section while amounts remain potentially payable by the applicant under those arrangements.
Note 2: All medical indemnity arrangements (arrangements under which medical indemnity cover is provided for health care professionals) that are entered into, come into effect or are renewed on or after 1 July 2003 must be by way of contracts of insurance (see section 10 of the Medical Indemnity (Prudential Supervision and Product Standards) Act 2003).
(4) If APRA authorises an applicant, APRA must:
(a) give written notice to the applicant; and
(b) ensure that notice of the authorisation is published in the Gazette.
(5) The taking of an action is not invalid merely because of a failure to comply with subsection (4).
(6) Part VI applies to a refusal of APRA to authorise an applicant under this section.
13 Conditions on an authorisation
(1) APRA may, at any time, by giving written notice to a general insurer:
(a) impose conditions, or additional conditions, on the insurer’s authorisation under section 12; or
(b) vary or revoke conditions imposed on the insurer’s authorisation under section 12.
The conditions must relate to prudential matters.
(2) A condition may be expressed to have effect despite anything in the prudential standards.
(3) Without limiting the conditions that APRA may impose on an authorisation, APRA may make the authorisation conditional on a body corporate, of which the general insurer is a subsidiary, being an authorised NOHC.
(4) If APRA imposes, varies or revokes the conditions on a general insurer’s authorisation, APRA must:
(a) give written notice to the insurer; and
(b) ensure that notice that the action has been taken is published in the Gazette.
(5) The taking of an action is not invalid merely because of a failure to comply with subsection (4).
(6) Part VI applies to the following decisions made under this section:
(a) a decision to impose conditions, or additional conditions, on an insurer’s authorisation under section 12;
(b) a decision to vary conditions imposed on an insurer’s authorisation under section 12.
14 Breach of authorisation conditions
(1) A general insurer commits an offence if:
(a) the insurer does an act or fails to do an act; and
(b) doing the act or failing to do the act results in a contravention of a condition of the insurer’s authorisation under section 12; and
(c) there is no determination in force under subsection 7(1) that this subsection does not apply to the insurer.
Penalty: 300 penalty units.
(1A) If an individual:
(a) commits an offence against subsection (1) because of Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code; or
(b) commits an offence under Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code in relation to an offence against subsection (1);
he or she is punishable, on conviction, by a fine not exceeding 60 penalty units.
(2) An offence against this section is an offence of strict liability.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Division 3—Revocation of an authorisation
15 Revocation of authorisation etc.
(1) APRA may revoke (in writing) a general insurer’s authorisation under section 12 if APRA is satisfied that the insurer has no liabilities in respect of insurance business carried on by it in Australia and that:
(a) the insurer has failed to comply with:
(i) a requirement of this Act (including the requirement to comply with the prudential standards) or of an instrument made for the purposes of this Act; or
(ii) a requirement of the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001; or
(iiaa) a requirement of the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023; or
(iia) a requirement of a provision of another law of the Commonwealth, if the provision is specified in the regulations; or
(iii) a direction under this Act to the insurer; or
(iv) a condition of the insurer’s authorisation; or
(b) it would be contrary to the national interest for the authorisation to remain in force; or
(c) the insurer has failed to pay:
(i) an amount of levy or late penalty to which the Financial Institutions Supervisory Levies Collection Act 1998 applies; or
(ii) an amount of charge fixed under section 51 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998; or
(d) the insurer is insolvent and is unlikely to return to solvency within a reasonable period of time; or
(e) the insurer has inadequate capital and is unlikely to have adequate capital within a reasonable period of time; or
(f) the insurer has ceased to carry on insurance business in Australia; or
(fa) both of the following apply:
(i) the insurer is a foreign corporation within the meaning of paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution;
(ii) an authorisation (however described) for the insurer to carry on insurance business in a foreign country has been revoked or otherwise withdrawn in that foreign country; or
(g) the insurer has not, within the period of 12 months after it was granted an authorisation under this Part, carried on insurance business in Australia.
(3) Before revoking a general insurer’s authorisation, APRA must give written notice to the insurer advising it that:
(a) APRA is considering revoking the authorisation for the reasons specified; and
(b) the insurer may make submissions about the revocation to APRA, in accordance with the notice, by a specified date (which must be at least 90 days after the notice is given).
(3A) To avoid doubt, APRA may give a notice under subsection (3) to a general insurer even if, at the time the notice is given, APRA is not satisfied that the insurer has no liabilities in respect of insurance business carried on by it in Australia.
(3B) If APRA gives a notice under subsection (3) to a general insurer, APRA must not revoke the insurer’s authorisation until after the date specified in the notice, and after consideration of any submission, as mentioned in paragraph (3)(b).
(4) APRA may decide that subsection (3) does not apply if APRA is satisfied that complying with that subsection could result in a delay in revocation that would be contrary to the national interest.
(5) If APRA revokes a general insurer’s authorisation, APRA must:
(a) give written notice to the insurer; and
(b) ensure that notice of the revocation is published in the Gazette.
(6) A revocation is not invalid merely because of a failure to comply with subsection (5).
(7) Part VI applies to a decision to revoke a general insurer’s authorisation under section 12.
16 When APRA must revoke a general insurer’s authorisation
(1) APRA must revoke (in writing) a general insurer’s authorisation under section 12 if:
(a) the insurer asks (in writing) APRA to do so; and
(b) APRA is satisfied that:
(i) the insurer has no liabilities in respect of insurance business carried on by it in Australia; and
(ii) revoking the authorisation would not be contrary to the national interest.
(2) If APRA revokes a general insurer’s authorisation, APRA must:
(a) give written notice to the insurer; and
(b) ensure that notice of the revocation is published in the Gazette.
(3) A revocation is not invalid merely because of a failure to comply with subsection (2).
16A Continuation of effect of general insurer’s authorisation
If APRA gives a notice of revocation of a general insurer’s authorisation under subsection 15(5) or 16(2), the notice may state that the authorisation continues in effect in relation to a specified matter or specified period, as though the revocation had not happened, for the purposes of:
(a) a specified provision of this Act or the regulations; or
(b) a specified provision of another law of the Commonwealth that is administered by APRA; or
(c) a specified provision of the prudential standards;
and the statement has effect accordingly.
17 Assignment of liabilities to enable revocation
(1) If APRA considers that it would, under section 15, revoke a general insurer’s authorisation if the insurer had no liabilities in respect of insurance business carried on by it in Australia, APRA may direct the insurer to arrange, subject to APRA’s approval, to assign those liabilities to one or more other general insurers. The insurer must effect the assignment of the liabilities within the period specified in the direction and comply with such conditions relating to the assignment as are specified by APRA in the direction.
(2) Subsection (1) has effect despite subsection 17B(1).
Note: A general insurer who has asked APRA for a revocation under section 16 may, for the purpose of obtaining the revocation, make an application to the Federal Court under Division 3A for an order transferring the insurer’s insurance business to another general insurer.
(3) A general insurer must not assign its liabilities under this section, and a purported assignment under this section is of no effect, unless the assignment is approved by APRA under subsection (4).
(4) APRA may only approve a proposed assignment of a general insurer’s liabilities under this section if APRA is satisfied that the assignment is appropriate, having regard to:
(a) the interests of the insurer’s policyholders; and
(b) the interests of the policyholders of the general insurer or insurers to whom the liabilities are to be assigned; and
(c) the national interest; and
(d) any other matter APRA considers relevant.
The approval must be in writing and may be made subject to specified conditions.
(4A) Where a general insurer (the first general insurer) accepts an assignment of liabilities from another general insurer (the second general insurer) approved by APRA under subsection 17(4), the following are taken to have occurred:
(a) policies in respect of which liability is accepted by the first general insurer (the transferring policies) are to be treated for all purposes as if each policy had been transferred by novation from the second general insurer to the first general insurer;
(b) a policyholder of a transferring policy is taken to have the same rights against the first general insurer as the person would have against that insurer had the person’s policy been transferred by novation to the first general insurer;
(c) the rights of the first general insurer against policyholders of transferring policies are the same as they would be had the transferring policies been transferred by novation to the first general insurer from the second general insurer.
(5) If APRA approves an assignment, the general insurer must:
(a) comply with the conditions on the approval; and
(b) give reasonable notice (in writing) of the assignment to the insurer’s policyholders; and
(c) give APRA such written evidence of the assignment as APRA reasonably requires.
(6) An assignment of liabilities under this section may include the assignment of any rights or benefits in connection with contracts of insurance in respect of the insurance business carried on in Australia by the general insurer concerned.
(7) A direction under subsection (1) has effect despite anything in the Insurance Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1991.
(8) A general insurer commits an offence if:
(a) the insurer does, or fails to do, an act; and
(b) by doing or failing to do the act, the insurer fails to comply with a direction under this section.
Penalty: 300 penalty units.
(8A) If an individual:
(a) commits an offence against subsection (8) because of Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code; or
(b) commits an offence under Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code in relation to an offence against subsection (8);
he or she is punishable, on conviction, by a fine not exceeding 60 penalty units.
(9) An offence against this section is an offence of strict liability.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
(10) Part VI applies to the following decisions made under this section:
(a) a decision to give a direction under subsection (1);
(b) a refusal to approve a proposed assignment under subsection (4);
(c) a decision to impose conditions on an approval.
Division 3A—Transfer and amalgamation of insurance business
A reference in this Division to a body corporate affected by a scheme is a reference to a body corporate that is a party or proposed party to an agreement or deed by which the transfer or amalgamation provided for by the scheme is, or is to be, carried out.
17B Transfer or amalgamation of insurance business
(1) No part of the insurance business of a general insurer may be:
(a) transferred to another general insurer; or
(b) amalgamated with the business of another general insurer;
except under a scheme confirmed by the Federal Court.
Note: A transfer or amalgamation of an insurance business may also require approval under the Insurance Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1991.
(2) The reference in paragraph (1)(a) to a general insurer includes a reference to a body corporate that is authorised under this Act but has not begun to carry on insurance business in Australia.
(3) A scheme must set out:
(a) the terms of the agreement or deed under which the proposed transfer or amalgamation is carried out; and
(b) particulars of any other arrangements necessary to give effect to the scheme.
(4) Subsection (1) does not require that a transfer or amalgamation of insurance business be made under a scheme approved by the Federal Court if:
(a) immediately before the transfer or amalgamation, the insurance business is carried on outside Australia; and
(b) the transfer or amalgamation will result in the insurance business being carried on outside Australia.
17C Steps to be taken before application for confirmation
(1) In this section:
affected policyholder means the holder of a policy affected by a scheme.
approved summary means a summary approved by APRA.
(2) An application for confirmation of a scheme may not be made unless:
(a) a copy of the scheme and any actuarial report on which the scheme is based have been given to APRA in accordance with the prudential standards; and
(b) notice of intention to make the application has been published by the applicant in accordance with the prudential standards; and
(c) an approved summary of the scheme has been given to every affected policyholder.
(3) Without limiting the provision that may be made by the prudential standards for the purposes of paragraph (2)(b), the notice referred to in that paragraph must include, in relation to each body corporate affected by the scheme, details of the place and time at which an affected policyholder may obtain a copy of the scheme.
(4) An affected policyholder is entitled, on the person’s request, to be provided by the company with one copy of the scheme free of charge.
(5) The Federal Court may dispense with the need for compliance with paragraph (2)(c) in relation to a particular scheme if it is satisfied that, because of the nature of the scheme or the circumstances attending its preparation, it is not necessary that the paragraph be complied with.
17D Actuarial report on scheme
(1) When a copy of a scheme has been given to APRA for the purpose of paragraph 17C(2)(a), APRA may arrange for an independent actuary to make a written report on the scheme.
(2) APRA may give a copy of the report to each body corporate affected by the scheme.
(1) Any of the bodies corporate affected by a scheme may apply to the Federal Court for confirmation of the scheme.
(2) An application for confirmation must be made in accordance with the prudential standards.
(3) APRA is entitled to be heard on an application.
(1) The Federal Court may:
(a) confirm a scheme without modification; or
(b) confirm the scheme subject to such modifications as it thinks appropriate; or
(c) refuse to confirm the scheme.
(1A) In deciding whether to confirm a scheme (with or without modifications), the Federal Court must have regard to:
(a) the interests of the policyholders of a body corporate affected by the scheme; and
(b) if a report relevant to all or part of the scheme has been filed with the Court under section 62ZI—that report; and
(c) any other matter the Court considers relevant.
(2) The Federal Court may make such orders as it thinks fit in relation to reinsurance.
17G Effect of confirmation etc.
When a scheme is confirmed:
(a) it becomes binding on all persons; and
(b) it has effect in spite of anything in the constitution of any body corporate affected by the scheme; and
(c) the body corporate on whose application the scheme was confirmed must cause a copy of the scheme to be lodged at an office of ASIC in every State and Territory in which a company affected by the scheme carried on business.
(1) When a scheme is confirmed, the body corporate that applied for the confirmation becomes liable to pay to the Commonwealth an amount equal to the expenses reasonably incurred by APRA in obtaining a report under section 17D in relation to the scheme.
(2) An amount due under subsection (1) may be recovered by the Commonwealth as a debt in any court of competent jurisdiction.
17I Documents to be lodged in case of transfer or amalgamation
(1) If any part of the insurance business carried on by a general insurer is transferred to, or amalgamated with, the insurance business of another body corporate, the latter body corporate must give APRA such documents as are required by the prudential standards.
(2) The documents must be lodged within the time fixed by the prudential standards or within such further time as APRA, in accordance with the prudential standards, allows.
Division 4—Authorisation to be a NOHC of a general insurer
(1) A body corporate may apply in writing to APRA for an authorisation (a NOHC authorisation) under this section. The authorisation operates as an authorisation in relation to the body corporate and any general insurers that are subsidiaries of the body corporate from time to time.
Note 1: The body corporate may want the authority because APRA may refuse to grant a subsidiary of the body corporate a section 12 authorisation unless the body corporate holds a NOHC authorisation (see subsection 12(3)).
Note 2: The body corporate may also need to consider the implications of the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975, the Financial Sector (Shareholdings) Act 1998 and the Insurance Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1991.
(2) APRA may require the body corporate to provide a statutory declaration in relation to information or documents provided in relation to the application.
(2A) APRA may, by legislative instrument, set criteria for the granting of an authorisation under this section.
(3) APRA may authorise an applicant if it considers it is appropriate to do so. The authorisation must be in writing.
(4) If APRA authorises an applicant, APRA must:
(a) give written notice to the applicant; and
(b) ensure that notice of the authorisation is published in the Gazette.
(5) The taking of an action is not invalid merely because of a failure to comply with subsection (4).
(6) Part VI applies to a refusal of APRA to authorise an applicant under this section.
19 Conditions on a NOHC authorisation
(1) APRA may, at any time, by giving written notice to an authorised NOHC:
(a) impose conditions, or additional conditions, on the NOHC authorisation; and
(b) vary or revoke conditions imposed on the NOHC authorisation.
The conditions must relate to prudential matters.
(2) A condition may be expressed to have effect despite anything in the prudential standards.
(3) If APRA imposes, varies or revokes the conditions on a NOHC authorisation, APRA must:
(a) give written notice to the authorised NOHC; and
(b) ensure that notice of the imposition, variation or revocation of the conditions is published in the Gazette.
(4) The taking of an action is not invalid merely because of a failure to comply with subsection (3).
(5) Part VI applies to the following decisions made under this section:
(a) a decision to impose conditions, or additional conditions, on a NOHC authorisation;
(b) a decision to vary conditions imposed on a NOHC authorisation.
20 Breach of conditions on a NOHC authorisation
(1) An authorised NOHC commits an offence if:
(a) the NOHC does an act or fails to do an act; and
(b) doing the act or failing to do the act results in a contravention of a condition of the NOHC authorisation; and
(c) there is no determination in force under subsection 7(1) that this subsection does not apply to the NOHC.
Penalty: 300 penalty units.
(1A) If an individual:
(a) commits an offence against subsection (1) because of Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code; or
(b) commits an offence under Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code in relation to an offence against subsection (1);
he or she is punishable, on conviction, by a fine not exceeding 60 penalty units.
(2) An offence against this section is an offence of strict liability.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
21 When APRA may revoke a NOHC authorisation
(1) APRA may revoke, in writing, a NOHC authorisation if APRA is satisfied that:
(a) the authorised NOHC has failed to comply with:
(i) a requirement of this Act (including the requirement to comply with the prudential standards) or of an instrument made for the purposes of this Act; or
(ii) a requirement of the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001; or
(iiaa) a requirement of the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023; or
(iia) a requirement of a provision of another law of the Commonwealth, if the provision is specified in the regulations; or
(iii) a direction under this Act to the authorised NOHC; or
(iv) a condition of the authorisation; or
(b) it would be contrary to the national interest for the authorisation to remain in force; or
(c) the authorised NOHC has failed to pay:
(i) an amount of levy or late penalty to which the Financial Institutions Supervisory Levies Collection Act 1998 applies; or
(ii) an amount of charge fixed under section 51 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998; or
(d) it would be contrary to the interests of the policyholders of any general insurer who is a subsidiary of the authorised NOHC for the authorisation to remain in force; or
(e) the authorised NOHC has ceased to be a NOHC of any general insurer.
(3) Before revoking a NOHC authorisation, APRA must give written notice to the authorised NOHC advising it that:
(a) APRA is considering revoking the authorisation for the reasons specified; and
(b) the authorised NOHC may make submissions about the revocation to APRA, in accordance with the notice, by a specified date (which must be at least 90 days after the notice is given).
APRA must consider any submissions made by the authorised NOHC by that date.
(4) APRA may decide that subsection (3) does not apply if APRA is satisfied that complying with that subsection could result in a delay in revocation that would be:
(a) contrary to the national interest; or
(b) contrary to the interests of the policyholders of any general insurer who is a subsidiary of the authorised NOHC concerned.
(5) If APRA revokes a body corporate’s NOHC authorisation, APRA must:
(a) give written notice to the body corporate; and
(b) ensure that notice of the revocation is published in the Gazette.
(6) A revocation is not invalid merely because of a failure to comply with subsection (5).
(7) Part VI applies to a decision to revoke a NOHC authorisation.
22 When APRA must revoke a NOHC authorisation
(1) APRA must revoke (in writing) a body corporate’s NOHC authorisation if:
(a) the body corporate asks (in writing) APRA to do so; and
(b) APRA is satisfied that revoking the authorisation would not be contrary to either:
(i) the national interest; or
(ii) the interests of the policyholders of any general insurer who is a subsidiary of the body corporate.
(2) If APRA revokes a body corporate’s NOHC authorisation, APRA must:
(a) give written notice to the body corporate; and
(b) ensure that notice of the revocation is published in the Gazette.
(3) A revocation is not invalid merely because of a failure to comply with subsection (2).
22A Continuation of effect of body corporate’s NOHC authorisation
If APRA gives a notice of revocation of a body corporate’s NOHC authorisation under subsection 21(5) or 22(2), the notice may state that the authorisation continues in effect in relation to a specified matter or specified period, as though the revocation had not happened, for the purposes of:
(a) a specified provision of this Act or the regulations; or
(b) a specified provision of another law of the Commonwealth that is administered by APRA; or
(c) a specified provision of the prudential standards;
and the statement has effect accordingly.
23 Publication of list of authorised NOHCs
APRA may, from time to time, cause a list of authorised NOHCs to be published in the Gazette or in any other way that APRA considers appropriate.
23A APRA may give notice to ensure that general insurer has an authorised NOHC
(1) This section applies if:
(a) a body corporate is a holding company of a general insurer; and
(b) the general insurer is not a subsidiary of an authorised NOHC.
(2) APRA may, by notice in writing to the body corporate, require it to ensure, in accordance with the conditions (if any) specified in the notice, that either of the following occurs:
(a) the body corporate becomes an authorised NOHC of the general insurer;
(b) a subsidiary of the body corporate becomes an authorised NOHC of the general insurer.
Note: See Part 4A of the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999 for other provisions that deal with a restructure arrangement to make an operating body a subsidiary of a NOHC.
(3) The notice may deal with the time by which, or period during which, it is to be complied with.
(4) The body corporate has power to comply with the notice despite anything in its constitution or any contract or arrangement to which it is a party.
(5) APRA may, by notice in writing to the body corporate, vary the notice mentioned in subsection (2) if, at the time of the variation, it considers that the variation is necessary and appropriate.
(6) The notice mentioned in subsection (2) has effect until APRA revokes it by notice in writing to the body corporate. APRA may revoke the notice mentioned in subsection (2) if, at the time of revocation, it considers that the notice is no longer necessary or appropriate.
(7) Part VI applies to a decision to give a notice under subsection (2).
(8) Section 108 applies in relation to a notice to a body corporate under subsection (2) in the same way in which it applies to a direction to a general insurer under section 104.
(9) However, section 108 does not apply to a contravention by a body corporate of a requirement in a notice under subsection (2) if:
(a) the contravention happens merely because APRA refuses to authorise the body corporate (or its subsidiary) under section 18; and
(b) APRA’s reasons for that refusal do not include the reason that one or more conditions specified in the notice are not satisfied.
24 Disqualified persons must not act for general insurers or authorised NOHCs
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is a disqualified person; and
(b) the person is or acts as one of the following:
(i) a director or senior manager of a general insurer (other than a foreign general insurer);
(ii) a senior manager, or agent in Australia for the purpose of section 118, of a foreign general insurer;
(iii) a director or senior manager of an authorised NOHC;
(iv) a director or senior manager of a corporate agent; and
(c) for a person who is a disqualified person only because he or she was disqualified under section 25A—the person is disqualified from being or acting as that director, senior manager or agent in Australia (as the case requires).
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.
(2) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is a disqualified person; and
(b) the person is or acts as one of the following:
(i) a director or senior manager of a general insurer (other than a foreign general insurer);
(ii) a senior manager, or agent in Australia for the purpose of section 118, of a foreign general insurer;
(iii) a director or senior manager of an authorised NOHC;
(iv) a director or senior manager of a corporate agent; and
(c) for a person who is a disqualified person only because he or she was disqualified under section 25A—the person is disqualified from being or acting as that director, senior manager or agent in Australia (as the case requires).
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(3) Subsection (2) is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
(4) A body corporate commits an offence if:
(a) a person is a disqualified person; and
(b) the person is or acts as one of the following:
(i) if the body corporate is a general insurer (other than a foreign general insurer)—a director or senior manager of the insurer;
(ii) if the body corporate is a foreign general insurer—a senior manager, or agent in Australia for the purpose of section 118, of the insurer;
(iii) if the body corporate is an authorised NOHC—a director or senior manager of the NOHC;
(iv) if the body corporate is a corporate agent—a director or senior manager of the corporate agent; and
(c) for a person who is a disqualified person only because he or she was disqualified under section 25A—the person is disqualified from being or acting as that director, senior manager or agent in Australia (as the case requires); and
(d) in any case—the body corporate allows the person to be or act as a director, senior manager or agent in Australia (as the case requires).
Penalty: 250 penalty units.
(5) A body corporate commits an offence if:
(a) a person is a disqualified person; and
(b) the person is or acts as one of the following:
(i) if the body corporate is a general insurer (other than a foreign general insurer)—a director or senior manager of the insurer;
(ii) if the body corporate is a foreign general insurer—a senior manager, or agent in Australia for the purpose of section 118, of the insurer;
(iii) if the body corporate is an authorised NOHC—a director or senior manager of the NOHC;
(iv) if the body corporate is a corporate agent—a director or senior manager of the corporate agent; and
(c) for a person who is a disqualified person only because he or she was disqualified under section 25A—the person is disqualified from being or acting as that director, senior manager or agent in Australia (as the case requires); and
(d) in any case—the body corporate allows the person to be or act as a director, senior manager or agent in Australia (as the case requires).
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(6) Subsection (5) is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
(8) A failure to comply with this section does not affect the validity of an appointment or transaction.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 3: If a body corporate is convicted of an offence against this section, subsection 4B(3) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose a fine of up to 5 times the penalty above.
25 Who is a disqualified person?
(1) A person is a disqualified person if, at any time:
(a) the person has been convicted of an offence against or arising out of:
(i) this Act; or
(ii) the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001; or
(iia) the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023; or
(iii) the Corporations Act 2001, the Corporations Law that was previously in force, or any law of a foreign country that corresponds to that Act or to that Corporations Law; or
(b) the person has been convicted of an offence against or arising out of a law in force in Australia, or the law of a foreign country, if the offence concerns dishonest conduct or conduct relating to a financial sector company (within the meaning of the Financial Sector (Shareholdings) Act 1998); or
(c) in a case where the person is an individual:
(i) the individual has been or becomes bankrupt; or
(ii) the individual has applied to take the benefit of a law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or
(iii) the individual has compounded with his or her creditors; or
(d) in a case where the person is a corporate agent:
(i) the corporate agent knows, or has reasonable grounds to suspect, that a person who is, or is acting as, a director or senior manager of the corporate agent is a disqualified person; or
(ii) a receiver, or a receiver and manager, has been appointed in respect of property owned by the corporate agent; or
(iii) an administrator has been appointed in respect of the corporate agent; or
(iv) a provisional liquidator has been appointed in respect of the corporate agent; or
(v) the corporate agent has begun to be wound up; or
(f) the Federal Court of Australia has disqualified the person under section 25A.
Note: The Federal Court of Australia may determine that a person is not a disqualified person (see section 26).
(2) A reference in subsection (1) to a person who has been convicted of an offence includes a reference to a person in respect of whom an order has been made relating to the offence under:
(a) section 19B of the Crimes Act 1914; or
(b) a corresponding provision of a law of a State, a Territory or a foreign country.
(3) Nothing in this section affects the operation of Part VIIC of the Crimes Act 1914 (which includes provisions that, in certain circumstances, relieve persons from the requirement to disclose spent convictions and require persons aware of such convictions to disregard them).
25A Court power of disqualification
(1) On application by APRA, the Federal Court of Australia may, by order, disqualify a person from being or acting as a person referred to in subsection (2), for a period that the Court considers appropriate, if the Court is satisfied that:
(a) the person is not a fit and proper person to be or act as such a person; and
(b) the disqualification is justified.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the Court may disqualify a person from being or acting as one or more of the following:
(a) a director or senior manager of:
(i) a particular general insurer; or
(ii) a class of general insurers; or
(iii) any general insurer;
(other than a particular foreign general insurer, a class of foreign general insurers or any foreign general insurer);
(b) a senior manager, or agent in Australia for the purpose of section 118, of:
(i) a particular foreign general insurer; or
(ii) a class of foreign general insurers; or
(iii) any foreign general insurer;
(c) a director or senior manager of:
(i) a particular authorised NOHC; or
(ii) a class of authorised NOHCs; or
(iii) any authorised NOHC;
(d) a director or senior manager of:
(i) a particular corporate agent; or
(ii) a class of corporate agents; or
(iii) any corporate agent.
(3) In deciding whether it is satisfied as mentioned in paragraph (1)(a), the Court may take into account:
(a) any matters specified in the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph; and
(b) any criteria for fitness and propriety set out in the prudential standards; and
(c) any other matters the Court considers relevant.
(4) In deciding whether the disqualification is justified as mentioned in paragraph (1)(b), the Court may have regard to:
(a) the person’s conduct in relation to the management, business or property of any corporation; and
(b) any other matters the Court considers relevant.
(5) As soon as practicable after the Court disqualifies a person under this section, APRA must cause particulars of the disqualification:
(a) to be given:
(i) if the person is, or is acting as, a person referred to in subparagraph (2)(a)(i)—to the general insurer concerned; or
(ii) if the person is, or is acting as, a person referred to in subparagraph (2)(b)(i)—to the foreign general insurer concerned; or
(iii) if the person is, or is acting as, a person referred to in paragraph (2)(c)(i)—to the authorised NOHC concerned; or
(iv) if the person is, or is acting as, a person referred to in paragraph (2)(d)(i)—to the corporate agent concerned, and to any foreign general insurer for which the agent is the corporate agent; and
(b) to be published in the Gazette.
26 Court power to revoke or vary a disqualification etc.
(1) A disqualified person, or APRA, may apply to the Federal Court of Australia for:
(a) if the person is a disqualified person only because he or she was disqualified under section 25A—a variation or a revocation of the order made under that section; or
(b) otherwise—an order that the person is not a disqualified person.
(2) If the Court revokes an order under paragraph (1)(a) or makes an order under paragraph (1)(b), then, despite section 25, the person is not a disqualified person.
(3) At least 21 days before commencing the proceedings, written notice of the application must be lodged:
(a) if the disqualified person makes the application—by the person with APRA; or
(b) if APRA makes the application—by APRA with the disqualified person.
(4) An order under paragraph (1)(b) may be expressed to be subject to exceptions and conditions determined by the Court.
26A Privilege against exposure to penalty—disqualification under section 25A or 44
Proceedings
(1) In the case of any proceeding under, or arising out of, this Act, a person is not entitled to refuse or fail to comply with a requirement:
(a) to answer a question or give information; or
(b) to produce books, accounts or other documents; or
(c) to do any other act;
on the ground that the answer or information, production of the book or other thing, or doing that other act, as the case may be, might tend to make the person liable to a penalty by way of a disqualification under section 25A or 44.
(2) Subsection (1) applies whether or not the person is a defendant in, or a party to, the proceeding or any other proceeding.
Statutory requirements
(3) A person is not entitled to refuse or fail to comply with a requirement under this Act:
(a) to answer a question or give information; or
(b) to produce books, accounts or other documents; or
(c) to do any other act;
on the ground that the answer or information, production of the book or other thing, or doing that other act, as the case may be, might tend to make the person liable to a penalty by way of a disqualification under section 25A or 44.
Admissibility
(4) Subsection 38F(2) does not apply to a proceeding for the imposition of a penalty by way of a disqualification under section 25A or 44.
Other provisions
(5) Subsections (1) and (3) of this section have effect despite anything in:
(a) clause 5 of Schedule 1; or
(b) any other provision of this Act; or
(c) the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024.
Definition
(6) In this section:
penalty includes forfeiture.
(1) This section applies to a person who is:
(a) a director or senior manager of a general insurer (not including a foreign general insurer); or
(b) a senior manager, or agent in Australia for the purpose of section 118, of a foreign general insurer; or
(c) a director or senior manager of an authorised NOHC; or
(d) a director or senior manager of a corporate agent.
(2) APRA may direct (in writing) that the general insurer, authorised NOHC or corporate agent remove the person from the position if APRA is satisfied that the person:
(a) either:
(i) for a person who is a disqualified person only because he or she was disqualified under section 25A—is disqualified from being or acting as a director or senior manager of the insurer, NOHC or corporate agent; or
(ii) otherwise—is a disqualified person; or
(b) if the person is an individual—does not meet one or more of the criteria for fitness and propriety set out in the prudential standards.
(3) Before directing a general insurer, authorised NOHC or corporate agent to remove a person, APRA must give written notice to:
(a) the person; and
(b) the insurer, NOHC or agent;
giving each of them a reasonable opportunity to make submissions on the matter.
(3A) If a submission is made to APRA in response to the notice, APRA must have regard to the submission and may discuss any matter contained in the submission with such persons as it considers appropriate for the purpose of assessing the truth of the matter.
(3B) A notice given under subsection (3) to a person, a general insurer, authorised NOHC or corporate agent must state that any submissions made in response to the notice may be discussed by APRA with other persons as mentioned in subsection (3A).
(4) A direction takes effect on the day specified in it, which must be at least 7 days after it is made.
(5) If APRA directs a general insurer, authorised NOHC or corporate agent to remove a person, APRA must give a copy of the direction to the person and insurer, NOHC or agent.
(5A) The power of a general insurer to comply with a direction under this section may be exercised on behalf of the general insurer as set out in the table:
Power to comply with a direction | ||
Item | Who may exercise the power | How the power may be exercised |
1 | The chair of the board of directors of the general insurer | by signing a written notice. |
2 | A majority of the directors of the general insurer (excluding any director who is the subject of the direction) | by jointly signing a written notice. |
(5B) The power of an authorised NOHC to comply with a direction under this section may be exercised on behalf of the NOHC as set out in the table:
Power to comply with a direction | ||
Item | Who may exercise the power | How the power may be exercised |
1 | The chair of the board of directors of the NOHC | by signing a written notice. |
2 | A majority of the directors of the NOHC (excluding any director who is the subject of the direction) | by jointly signing a written notice. |
(5BA) The power of a corporate agent to comply with a direction under this section may be exercised on behalf of the agent as set out in the table:
Power to comply with a direction | ||
Item | Who may exercise the power | How the power may be exercised |
1 | The chair of the board of directors of the agent | by signing a written notice. |
2 | A majority of the directors of the agent (excluding any director who is the subject of the direction) | by jointly signing a written notice. |
(5C) Subsections (5A), (5B) and (5BA) do not, by implication, limit any other powers of a general insurer, authorised NOHC or corporate agent to remove a person.
(6) Part VI applies to a direction made by APRA under this section.
(7) A general insurer, authorised NOHC or corporate agent commits an offence if:
(a) the insurer, NOHC or agent does, or fails to do, an act; and
(b) by doing or failing to do the act, the insurer, NOHC or agent fails to comply with a direction under this section.
Penalty: 300 penalty units.
(7A) If an individual:
(a) commits an offence against subsection (7) because of Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code; or
(b) commits an offence under Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code in relation to an offence against subsection (7);
he or she is punishable, on conviction, by a fine not exceeding 60 penalty units.
(8) An offence against this section is an offence of strict liability.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
28 General insurer must hold sufficient assets
A general insurer commits an offence if:
(a) it does not hold assets in Australia (excluding goodwill and any assets or other amount excluded by the prudential standards for the purposes of this section) of a value that is equal to or greater than the total amount of its liabilities in Australia other than pre‑authorisation liabilities; and
(b) APRA has not authorised the insurer to hold assets of a lesser value; and
(c) there is no determination in force under subsection 7(1) determining that this subsection does not apply to the insurer.
Penalty: 200 penalty units.
Note 1: Certain amounts are taken to be assets in Australia, and certain liabilities are taken to be liabilities in Australia, under section 116A.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 3: If a body corporate is convicted of an offence against this section, subsection 4B(3) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose a fine of up to 5 times the penalty above.
28A Commencement and cessation of insurance business
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is a general insurer; and
(b) the person becomes aware that the person has started to carry on insurance business in Australia; and
(c) the person does not tell APRA of the date on which the person started to carry on insurance business in Australia:
(i) in writing; and
(ii) within 7 days after the date on which the person becomes aware that the person had started to carry on insurance business in Australia.
Penalty: 50 penalty units.
(2) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is a general insurer; and
(b) the person becomes aware that the person has ceased to carry on insurance business in Australia; and
(c) the person does not tell APRA of the date on which the person ceased to carry on insurance business in Australia:
(i) in writing; and
(ii) within 7 days after the date on which the person becomes aware that the person has ceased to carry on insurance business in Australia.
Penalty: 50 penalty units.
29 Change of name of a general insurer or authorised NOHC
(1) A general insurer who changes its name must publish a notice of that fact:
(a) unless paragraph (b) applies—in a manner that results in the notice being accessible to the public and reasonably prominent; or
(b) if a determination under subsection (2A) is in force—in a manner specified in the determination.
(2) The notice must state the old and new names of the insurer and when the change took effect.
(2A) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), APRA may, by legislative instrument, make a determination specifying one or more manners in which a notice mentioned in subsection (1) may be published.
(2B) A manner of publication may be specified in the determination only if APRA considers that the manner of publication would result in such a notice being accessible to the public and reasonably prominent.
(3) If APRA is satisfied that a general insurer or authorised NOHC has changed its name, APRA must ensure that notice of that fact is published in the Gazette (whether or not the insurer has also published a notice under subsection (1)).
(4) The authorisation of the insurer under section 12, or NOHC under section 18, (as the case may be) has effect after the Gazette publication as if it had been given under the changed name.
30 General insurer or authorised NOHC ceasing to exist
(1) If APRA is satisfied that a general insurer or authorised NOHC has ceased to exist, APRA must ensure that notice of that fact is published in the Gazette.
(2) The authorisation under section 12 or 18 (as the case may be) of the insurer or NOHC is taken to be revoked when the Gazette notice is published.
31 Effect of authorisation as a general insurer
Nothing in this Part authorises the carrying on by a body corporate of any business that it would not otherwise have been authorised to carry on.
Division 1—The prudential standards
32 APRA may determine prudential standards
(1) APRA may determine (in writing) standards (prudential standards) relating to prudential matters that must be complied with by:
(a) all general insurers; or
(b) all authorised NOHCs; or
(c) the subsidiaries of general insurers or authorised NOHCs; or
(d) a specified class of general insurers, authorised NOHCs or subsidiaries of general insurers or authorised NOHCs; or
(e) one or more specified general insurers, authorised NOHCs or subsidiaries of general insurers or authorised NOHCs.
(2) A prudential standard may impose different requirements to be complied with:
(a) by different classes of general insurers, authorised NOHCs, or subsidiaries of general insurers or authorised NOHCs; or
(b) in different situations; or
(c) in respect of different activities.
(3) Without limiting the prudential matters in relation to which APRA may determine a prudential standard, a prudential standard may:
(a) require the following companies to ensure that the company’s subsidiaries (or particular subsidiaries), or the company and the company’s subsidiaries (or particular subsidiaries), collectively satisfy particular requirements in relation to prudential matters:
(i) each general insurer or authorised NOHC;
(ii) each general insurer or authorised NOHC included in a specified class of general insurers or authorised NOHCs;
(iii) a specified general insurer or authorised NOHC;
(iv) each of 2 or more specified general insurers or authorised NOHCs;
(v) each subsidiary of a general insurer or of an authorised NOHC;
(vi) each subsidiary of a general insurer or of an authorised NOHC, included in a specified class of subsidiaries; or
(b) provide for matters relating to:
(i) the appointment of auditors; or
(ii) the conduct of audits.
(3A) APRA may modify a prudential standard to replace particular requirements in the standard with an in‑house capital adequacy model proposed by, or agreed to with, a general insurer, an authorised NOHC or a subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC for the purpose of setting its capital requirements. The in‑house capital adequacy model proposed by the general insurer, authorised NOHC or subsidiary must comply with criteria set out in the prudential standards.
(3B) In modifying a prudential standard, APRA must have regard to the particular business and circumstances of the general insurer, authorised NOHC or subsidiary concerned.
(3C) If APRA modifies a prudential standard in respect of a particular general insurer, authorised NOHC or subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC under subsection (3A), APRA must give written notice of the modification to the general insurer, authorised NOHC or subsidiary concerned.
(3CA) APRA may vary or revoke a modification of a prudential standard and, if it revokes a modification, it may make under subsection (3A) a further modification of the standard in substitution for the previous modification. APRA must give written notice of a variation or revocation to the general insurer, authorised NOHC or subsidiary concerned.
(3D) The prudential standards may provide for APRA to exercise powers and discretions under the standards, including but not limited to discretions to approve, impose, adjust or exclude specific prudential requirements in relation to the following:
(a) a particular general insurer, authorised NOHC or subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC;
(b) specified general insurers, authorised NOHCs or subsidiaries of general insurers or authorised NOHCs.
(4) APRA may, in writing, vary or revoke a standard. However, APRA must not, under this subsection, vary or revoke a standard in a way described in subsection (3A).
(4A) A standard referred to in paragraph (1)(e), or an instrument varying or revoking such a standard, has effect:
(a) from the day on which the standard, variation or revocation is made; or
(b) if the standard, variation or revocation specifies a later day—from that later day.
(5) The following instruments made under this section are not legislative instruments:
(a) a standard referred to in paragraph (1)(e);
(b) an instrument varying or revoking a standard referred to in paragraph (1)(e);
(c) a modification of a standard under subsection (3A);
(d) an instrument varying or revoking a modification under subsection (3A).
(5A) Otherwise, an instrument made under this section is a legislative instrument.
(6) Despite section 14 of the Legislation Act 2003 and section 46AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901, the standards may make provision for or in relation to a matter by applying, adopting or incorporating any matter contained in an instrument or other writing as in force or existing from time to time.
(7) Part VI applies to a decision to determine, vary or revoke a standard referred to in paragraph (1)(e).
34 Notification of prudential standards
(1) APRA must ensure that a notice is published in the Gazette as soon as practicable after APRA makes, varies or revokes a prudential standard.
(2) The notice must:
(a) specify whether APRA made, varied or revoked a prudential standard; and
(b) in the case of the making or varying of a prudential standard—summarise the purpose and effect of the prudential standard or variation.
(3) APRA must take reasonable steps to ensure that copies of the current text of the prudential standards are available for inspection and purchase.
(4) An action is not invalid merely because of a failure to comply with this section.
35 Obligation to comply with the prudential standards
A general insurer, authorised NOHC or a subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC to whom a prudential standard applies must comply with the standard.
Division 2—Conversion and write‑off provisions
In this Division:
clearing and settlement facility has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act 2001.
conversion and write‑off provisions means the provisions of the prudential standards that relate to the conversion or writing off of:
(a) Additional Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital; or
(b) any other instrument.
conversion entity: an entity (the first entity) is a conversion entity for an instrument if:
(a) the instrument is issued by another entity, or another entity is a party to the instrument; and
(b) the instrument converts, in accordance with the terms of the instrument, into one or more ordinary shares of the first entity.
converts: an instrument converts into one or more ordinary shares of an entity including by redeeming or cancelling the instrument or rights under the instrument, and replacing the instrument or rights with ordinary shares.
operating rules has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act 2001.
related subsidiary of a general insurer means a subsidiary of a holding company of the general insurer.
specified law means any of the following:
(a) the Financial Sector (Shareholdings) Act 1998;
(b) the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975;
(c) Chapter 6 of the Corporations Act 2001 (takeovers);
(d) any other Australian law, or law of a foreign country or part of a foreign country, prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.
36B Conversion and write‑off provisions
Application
(1) This section applies in relation to an instrument that contains terms that are for the purposes of the conversion and write‑off provisions and that is issued by, or to which any of the following is a party:
(a) a general insurer;
(b) a holding company of a general insurer;
(c) a subsidiary or related subsidiary of a general insurer;
(d) an entity of a kind prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.
Conversion of instrument despite other laws etc.
(2) The instrument may be converted in accordance with the terms of the instrument despite:
(a) any Australian law or any law of a foreign country or a part of a foreign country, other than a specified law; and
(b) the constitution of any of the following entities (the relevant entity):
(i) the entity issuing the instrument;
(ii) any entity that is a party to the instrument;
(iii) any conversion entity for the instrument; and
(c) any contract or arrangement to which a relevant entity is a party; and
(d) any listing rules or operating rules of a financial market in whose official list a relevant entity is included; and
(e) any operating rules of a clearing and settlement facility through which the instrument is traded.
Write‑off of instrument despite other laws etc.
(3) The instrument may be written off in accordance with the terms of the instrument despite:
(a) any Australian law or any law of a foreign country or a part of a foreign country; and
(b) the constitution of either of the following entities (the relevant entity):
(i) the entity issuing the instrument;
(ii) any entity that is a party to the instrument; and
(c) any contract or arrangement to which a relevant entity is a party; and
(d) any listing rules or operating rules of a financial market in whose official list a relevant entity is included; and
(e) any operating rules of a clearing and settlement facility through which the instrument is traded.
36C Conversion or write‑off etc. not grounds for denial of obligations
(1) This section applies if an entity (the first entity) is party to a contract, whether the proper law of the contract is:
(a) Australian law (including the law of a State or Territory); or
(b) law of a foreign country (including the law of part of a foreign country).
(2) None of the matters mentioned in subsection (3) allows the contract, or a party to the contract (other than the first entity), to do any of the following:
(a) deny any obligation under the contract;
(b) accelerate any debt under the contract;
(c) close out any transaction relating to the contract;
(d) enforce any security under the contract.
(3) The matters are as follows:
(a) a relevant instrument being converted in accordance with the terms of the instrument;
(b) a relevant instrument being written off in accordance with the terms of the instrument;
(c) the making of a determination (however described) by APRA that results in a relevant instrument being required to be converted or written off in accordance with the terms of the instrument.
(4) In this section:
relevant instrument means:
(a) an instrument to which section 36B applies:
(i) that is issued by the first entity; or
(ii) to which the first entity is a party; or
(iii) for which the first entity is a conversion entity; or
(b) if the first entity is a body corporate that is a member of a relevant group of bodies corporate—an instrument to which section 36B applies:
(i) that is issued by another member of the group; or
(ii) to which another member of the group is a party; or
(iii) for which another member of the group is a conversion entity.
Division 3—Monitoring of prudential matters
38 APRA to monitor prudential matters
The functions of APRA include:
(a) collecting and analysing information on prudential matters concerning general insurers, authorised NOHCs and the subsidiaries of general insurers and authorised NOHCs; and
(b) encouraging and promoting the carrying out of sound practices in relation to prudential matters by general insurers, authorised NOHCs and the subsidiaries of general insurers and authorised NOHCs; and
(c) evaluating the effectiveness and carrying out of those practices.
38AA Requirement to notify APRA of certain matters
Matters requiring immediate notice
(1) If:
(a) a general insurer has breached or will breach a provision of this Act or the prudential standards; and
(b) the provision relates to financial obligations the general insurer has to its policy holders or to the general insurer’s minimum capital requirements;
the general insurer must immediately notify APRA in writing of the breach.
Offence in relation to matters requiring immediate notice
(2) A general insurer commits an offence if the general insurer contravenes subsection (1).
Penalty: 200 penalty units.
Defence if matter already notified
(3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a general insurer in relation to a breach referred to in subsection (1) if:
(a) the general insurer becomes aware of the breach because it is informed of it by an auditor or the actuary of the insurer; and
(b) the auditor or actuary informs the insurer that the auditor or actuary has notified APRA in writing of the matter; and
(c) the insurer has no reason to disbelieve the auditor or actuary.
Note 1: Auditors and actuaries must give APRA certain information under section 49A and may give APRA information under section 49B.
Note 2: The defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (3). See subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.
Matters requiring notice as soon as practicable
(4) If a body corporate that is a general insurer, an authorised NOHC or a subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC becomes aware:
(a) both:
(i) that the body corporate has breached or will breach a provision of this Act or the prudential standards (other than a provision to which subsection (1) applies); and
(ii) that the breach is or will be significant (see subsection (5)); or
(b) of a matter that materially and adversely affects the body corporate’s financial position;
the body corporate must give APRA a written report about the breach or matter as soon as practicable, and in any case no later than 10 business days, after becoming aware of the breach or matter.
(5) For the purposes of subparagraph (4)(a)(ii), a breach of a provision is or will be significant if the breach is or will be significant having regard to one or more of the following:
(a) the number or frequency of similar breaches;
(b) the impact the breach has or will have on the body corporate’s ability to conduct its business;
(c) the extent to which the breach indicates that the body corporate’s arrangements to ensure compliance with this Act or with the prudential standards might be inadequate;
(d) the actual or potential financial loss arising or that will arise from the breach:
(i) to policy holders of the body corporate; or
(ii) to the body corporate;
(e) any matters prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.
Offence in relation to matters requiring notice as soon as practicable
(6) A body corporate commits an offence if the body corporate contravenes subsection (4).
Penalty: 200 penalty units.
Defence if auditor or actuary notifies breach
(7) Subsection (6) does not apply to a body corporate in relation to a breach referred to in subsection (4) if:
(a) an auditor or the actuary of the body corporate gives APRA a written report about the breach or matter; and
(b) the report is given before, or within 10 business days after, the body corporate becomes aware of the breach or matter.
Note 1: Auditors and actuaries must give APRA certain information under section 49A and may give APRA information under section 49B.
Note 2: The defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (7). See subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.
Ancillary offences
(8) If an individual:
(a) commits an offence under subsection (2) or (6) because of Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code; or
(b) commits an offence under Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code in relation to an offence under subsection (2) or (6);
the individual is punishable on conviction by a fine not exceeding 40 penalty units.
Limits on information to be provided
(9) A notice or report given under subsection (1) or (4) must not include information, books, accounts or documents with respect to the affairs of an individual insured person, unless the information, books, accounts or documents are in respect of prudential matters relating to the body corporate.
Division 4—Protections in relation to information
Note: For protections for whistleblowers, see Part 9.4AAA of the Corporations Act 2001.
(1) A person is not excused from complying with a requirement under this Act, the prudential standards or the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 to give information to APRA on the ground that doing so would tend to incriminate the person or make the person liable to a penalty.
(2) However, if the person is an individual, the information given by the individual in compliance with the requirement is not admissible in evidence against the individual in criminal proceedings or in proceedings for the imposition of a penalty, other than proceedings in respect of the falsity of the information, if:
(a) before giving the information, the individual claims that giving the information might tend to incriminate the individual or make the individual liable to a penalty; and
(b) giving the information might in fact tend to incriminate the individual or make the individual liable to a penalty.
Part IV—Auditors, actuaries and accounts
Division 1—The auditors and actuary of a general insurer
39 Requirement for general insurers to have an auditor and actuary
(1) A general insurer must have:
(a) an auditor appointed by the insurer; and
(b) an actuary appointed by the insurer.
(2) Within 6 weeks after a person stops being the principal auditor or the actuary of a general insurer, the general insurer must appoint another person to be the principal auditor or the actuary.
(3) A general insurer must not appoint a person as an auditor or actuary of the insurer unless:
(a) the insurer is reasonably satisfied that the person meets the eligibility criteria for such an appointment set out in the prudential standards; and
(b) no order is in force under section 44 disqualifying the person from holding such an appointment.
(4) An appointment of a person as the principal auditor or the actuary of a general insurer cannot take effect while an appointment of another person in that position is current.
(1) APRA may, by written notice, require a general insurer to appoint a person who is specified in the notice to be an auditor for a purpose that is specified in the notice.
Example: APRA may require a general insurer to appoint an auditor who has specialist qualifications or experience to perform a special purpose audit.
(2) The specified person may be:
(a) the principal auditor; or
(b) another auditor.
41 Compliance with prudential standards
An auditor or actuary appointed by a general insurer must comply with the prudential standards in performing his or her duties or exercising his or her powers.
43 When a person stops holding an appointment
(1) A person stops holding an appointment as a general insurer’s auditor or actuary if:
(c) the person is disqualified under section 44 from holding the appointment; or
(d) the person resigns the appointment by giving written notice to the insurer; or
(e) the insurer ends the appointment by giving written notice to the person.
(2) A general insurer must end a person’s appointment as an auditor or actuary of the general insurer, by giving the person written notice under paragraph (1)(e), if the general insurer is satisfied that the person:
(a) has, in relation to the insurer, failed to perform adequately and properly the functions and duties of the appointment under this Act or the prudential standards; or
(aa) has failed to comply with a requirement of the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023; or
(b) does not meet one or more of the criteria for fitness and propriety set out in the prudential standards; or
(c) does not meet the eligibility criteria for the appointment set out in the prudential standards.
43A Disqualified persons must not act as auditor or actuary of general insurer
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is disqualified under section 44; and
(b) the person is or acts as an auditor or actuary of a general insurer; and
(c) the person is disqualified from being or acting as that auditor or actuary (as the case requires).
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.
(2) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is disqualified under section 44; and
(b) the person is or acts as an auditor or actuary of a general insurer; and
(c) the person is disqualified from being or acting as that auditor or actuary (as the case requires).
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(3) Subsection (2) is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
(4) A body corporate commits an offence if:
(a) a person is disqualified under section 44; and
(b) the person is or acts as an actuary or auditor of the body corporate; and
(c) the person is disqualified from being or acting as that actuary or auditor (as the case requires); and
(d) the body corporate allows the person to be or act as an actuary or auditor (as the case requires).
Penalty: 250 penalty units.
(5) A body corporate commits an offence if:
(a) a person is disqualified under section 44; and
(b) the person is or acts as an actuary or auditor of the body corporate; and
(c) the person is disqualified from being or acting as that actuary or auditor (as the case requires); and
(d) the body corporate allows the person to be or act as an actuary or auditor (as the case requires).
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(6) Subsection (5) is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
(7) A failure to comply with this section does not affect the validity of an appointment or transaction.
Note 1: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 2: If a body corporate is convicted of an offence against this section, subsection 4B(3) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose a fine of up to 5 times the penalty above.
44 Court power of disqualification
(1) On application by APRA, the Federal Court of Australia may, by order, disqualify a person from holding any appointment as a person referred to in subsection (2), for a period that the Court considers appropriate, if the Court is satisfied that:
(a) any of the following applies:
(i) the person has failed to perform adequately and properly the functions and duties of such an appointment under this Act or the prudential standards;
(ia) the person has failed to comply with a requirement of the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023;
(ii) the person otherwise does not meet one or more of the criteria for fitness and propriety set out in the prudential standards;
(iii) the person does not meet the eligibility criteria for such an appointment as set out in the prudential standards; and
(b) the disqualification is justified.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the Court may disqualify a person from being or acting as an auditor or actuary of:
(a) a particular general insurer; or
(b) a class of general insurers; or
(c) any general insurer.
(3) In deciding whether it is satisfied as mentioned in paragraph (1)(a), the Court may take into account:
(a) any matters specified in the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph; and
(b) any criteria for fitness and propriety set out in the prudential standards; and
(c) any other matters the Court considers relevant.
(4) In deciding whether the disqualification is justified as mentioned in paragraph (1)(b), the Court may have regard to:
(a) the person’s conduct in relation to the functions or duties that the person is required to perform under this Act, the prudential standards and the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023; and
(b) any other matters the Court considers relevant.
(5) As soon as practicable after the Court disqualifies a person under this section, APRA must cause particulars of the disqualification:
(a) if the person is, or is acting as, an auditor or actuary of a general insurer—to be given to the general insurer concerned; and
(b) to be published in the Gazette.
45 Court power to revoke or vary a disqualification etc.
(1) A person who is disqualified under section 44, or APRA, may apply to the Federal Court of Australia for a variation or a revocation of an order made under that section.
(2) At least 21 days before commencing the proceedings, written notice of the application must be lodged:
(a) if the person who is disqualified makes the application—by the person with APRA; or
(b) if APRA makes the application—by APRA with the person who is disqualified.
46 Notification of appointment as an auditor or actuary
(1) Within 14 days after a general insurer appoints a person as an auditor or actuary, the insurer must give APRA written notice of these matters:
(a) the person’s name;
(b) details of the person’s qualifications and experience;
(c) the date of the appointment;
(d) any other matter specified for the purposes of this section by the prudential standards.
(2) Within 14 days after a person stops being the principal auditor or the actuary of a general insurer, the insurer must give APRA written notice of that event (including the date on which it happened and the reasons for and circumstances of the event).
48 Referring matters to professional associations for auditors and actuaries
(1) If APRA is of the opinion that an auditor of a general insurer:
(a) has failed, whether within or outside Australia, to perform adequately and properly his or her duties or functions as an auditor under:
(i) this Act, the regulations or the prudential standards; or
(ia) the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023; or
(ii) any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or
(aa) is disqualified under section 44 from being or acting as an auditor of the general insurer; or
(b) is otherwise not a fit and proper person to be the auditor of a general insurer;
APRA may refer the details of the matter to either or both of the following:
(c) the Companies Auditors Disciplinary Board established by Division 1 of Part 11 of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001;
(d) those members of the professional association of the auditor whom APRA believes will be involved in considering or taking any disciplinary or other action concerning the matter against the auditor.
(2) If APRA is of the opinion that an actuary of a general insurer:
(a) has failed, whether within or outside Australia, to perform adequately and properly his or her duties as an actuary under:
(i) this Act, the regulations or the prudential standards; or
(ia) the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023; or
(ii) any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or
(aa) is disqualified under section 44 from being or acting as an actuary of the general insurer; or
(b) is otherwise not a fit and proper person to be the actuary of a general insurer;
APRA may refer the details of the matter to those members of the professional association of the actuary whom APRA believes will be involved in considering or taking any disciplinary or other action concerning the matter against the actuary.
(3) If APRA refers details of a matter under this section, APRA must also give written notice of the referral (including the nature of the matter) to the auditor or actuary.
Division 2—Provision of information to APRA
49 Duty of auditors and actuaries to give information when required
(1) APRA may give written notice to a person who is or was an auditor or actuary of:
(a) a general insurer; or
(b) an authorised NOHC; or
(c) a subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC;
to give APRA information, or to produce books, accounts or documents, about the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary if APRA considers that the provision of the information, or the production of the books, accounts or documents, will assist APRA in performing its functions under this Act or the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023.
(2) The person must comply with the notice and, in doing so, must not give APRA information that is false or misleading.
(3) A person commits an offence if the person contravenes subsection (2).
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months, or 100 penalty units, or both.
(4) A person commits an offence if the person contravenes subsection (2). This is an offence of strict liability.
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
49A Additional duty of auditors and actuaries to give information
Persons to whom requirements apply
(1) This section applies to a person who is or was an auditor or actuary of:
(a) a general insurer; or
(b) an authorised NOHC; or
(c) a subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC.
Matters requiring immediate notice
(2) If the person has reasonable grounds for believing that:
(a) the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary is insolvent, or there is a significant risk that it will become insolvent; or
(d) an existing or proposed state of affairs may materially prejudice the interests of:
(i) in the case of an auditor or actuary of a general insurer or of a subsidiary of a general insurer—the insurer’s policyholders; or
(ii) in the case of an auditor or actuary of an authorised NOHC or of a subsidiary of an authorised NOHC—the policyholders of any general insurer who is a subsidiary of the NOHC; or
(e) the general insurer, NOHC or subsidiary:
(i) has contravened this Act or any other law; and
(ii) the contravention is of such a nature that it may affect significantly the interest of policyholders of the general insurer or of a general insurer that is a subsidiary of the NOHC;
the person must immediately notify APRA in writing of the matter.
Offences in relation to matters requiring immediate notice
(3) A person commits an offence if the person contravenes subsection (2).
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months, or 100 penalty units, or both.
(4) A person commits an offence if the person contravenes subsection (2). This is an offence of strict liability.
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Defence in relation to matters requiring immediate notice
(5) Subsections (3) and (4) do not apply to a person in relation to a matter referred to in subsection (2) if:
(a) the person becomes aware of the matter because the person is informed of it by a director or senior manager of the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary; and
(b) the director or senior manager informs the person that the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary has notified APRA in writing of the matter; and
(c) the person has no reason to disbelieve the director or senior manager.
Note: The defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (5). See subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.
Matters requiring notice as soon as practicable
(6) If the person has reasonable grounds for believing:
(a) any of the following:
(i) the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary has failed or will fail to comply with the prudential standards;
(ii) in the case of an insurer—the insurer has failed or will fail to comply with a condition of its authorisation under section 12;
(iii) in the case of an authorised NOHC—the NOHC has failed or will fail to comply with a condition of its authorisation under section 18;
(iv) the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary has failed or will fail to comply with a requirement or direction under this Act, a requirement under the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 or a requirement of the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023; and
(b) that the failure is or will be significant (see subsection (7));
the person must give APRA a written report about the failure as soon as practicable, and in any case no later than 10 business days.
(7) For the purposes of paragraph (6)(b), a failure to comply is or will be significant if the failure to comply is or will be significant having regard to any one or more of the following:
(a) the number or frequency of similar failures;
(b) the impact the failure has or will have on the insurer’s, NOHC’s or subsidiary’s ability to conduct its business;
(c) the extent to which the failure indicates that the insurer’s, NOHC’s or subsidiary’s arrangements to ensure compliance with this Act or with the prudential standards might be inadequate;
(d) the actual or potential financial loss arising or that will arise from the failure:
(i) in the case of an insurer—to the policy holders of the insurer; or
(ii) to the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary;
(e) any matters prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.
Offences in relation to matters requiring notice as soon as practicable
(8) A person commits an offence if the person contravenes subsection (6).
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months, or 100 penalty units, or both.
(9) A person commits an offence if the person contravenes subsection (6). This is an offence of strict liability.
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Defence if failure already notified
(10) Subsections (8) and (9) do not apply to a person in relation to a failure to comply referred to in subsection (6) if:
(a) a director or senior manager of the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary informs the person that the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary has informed APRA in writing of the failure; and
(b) the person has no reason to disbelieve the director or senior manager.
Note: The defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matters in subsection (10). See subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.
Offence in relation to subsections (5) and (10)
(11) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is a director or senior manager of a general insurer, an authorised NOHC or a subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC; and
(b) the person knows that there are reasonable grounds for believing a thing referred to in subsection (2) or (6); and
(c) the person informs an auditor or the actuary of the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary that the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary has informed APRA in writing of the thing; and
(d) the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary has not done so.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
49B Auditor or actuary may give information to APRA
A person who is or was an auditor or actuary of:
(a) a general insurer; or
(b) an authorised NOHC; or
(c) a subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC;
may give information, or produce books, accounts or documents, to APRA about the insurer, NOHC or subsidiary if the person considers that giving the information, or the production of the books, accounts or documents, will assist APRA in performing its functions under this Act, the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 or the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023.
49D Auditor must notify APRA of attempts to unduly influence etc. the auditor
(1) If an auditor of a general insurer or authorised NOHC is aware of circumstances that amount to:
(a) an attempt by any person to unduly influence, coerce, manipulate or mislead the auditor in connection with the performance of the auditor’s functions or duties; or
(b) an attempt by any person to otherwise interfere with the performance of the auditor’s functions or duties;
the auditor must notify APRA in writing of those circumstances as soon as practicable, and in any case within 28 days, after the auditor becomes aware of those circumstances.
(2) An auditor commits an offence if the auditor contravenes subsection (1).
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months or 50 penalty units, or both.
49DA Giving false or misleading information to auditor
Offence—person knows the information is false or misleading etc.
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is an employee or officer of a general insurer or authorised NOHC; and
(b) the person gives information, or allows information to be given, to an auditor of the general insurer or authorised NOHC; and
(c) the information relates to the affairs of the general insurer or authorised NOHC; and
(d) the person knows that the information:
(i) is false or misleading in a material particular; or
(ii) is missing something that makes the information misleading in a material respect.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years or 200 penalty units, or both.
Offence—person fails to ensure the information is not false or misleading etc.
(2) A person commits an offence if:
(a) the person is an employee or officer of a general insurer or authorised NOHC; and
(b) the person gives information, or allows information to be given, to an auditor of the general insurer or authorised NOHC; and
(c) the information relates to the affairs of the general insurer or authorised NOHC; and
(d) the information:
(i) is false or misleading in a material particular; or
(ii) is missing something that makes the information misleading in a material respect; and
(e) the person did not take reasonable steps to ensure that the information:
(i) was not false or misleading in a material particular; or
(ii) was not missing something that makes the information misleading in a material respect.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 100 penalty units, or both.
Determining whether information is false or misleading
(3) If information is given to the auditor in response to a question asked by the auditor, the information and the question must be considered together in determining whether the information is false or misleading.
Division 3—Actuarial investigation required by APRA
49E Actuarial investigation of liabilities
(1) APRA may give written notice to a general insurer requiring it to appoint, at the insurer’s expense, an actuary (other than the actuary appointed in accordance with section 39) to:
(a) investigate all or a specified part of the insurer’s liabilities as at a particular time; and
(b) produce a written report.
Note: Only certain persons can be appointed as an actuary for the purposes of this section (see section 49G).
(2) The actuary must not be an officer (within the meaning of the Corporations Law) of the general insurer.
(3) Within 7 days after the general insurer is given the notice, it must appoint the actuary and advise APRA (in writing) of the actuary’s name.
(4) Within 7 days after being notified of an actuary’s name, APRA may give written notice to the general insurer that the actuary is not acceptable to APRA. The insurer must then, within 7 days:
(a) appoint a different actuary; and
(b) advise APRA (in writing) of the name of that actuary.
(5) Subsection (4) applies whether the notification of the actuary’s name is under subsection (3) or paragraph (4)(b).
(6) The general insurer must ensure that the actuary’s report is given to APRA:
(a) within 30 days after APRA gave the notice under subsection (1) requiring an actuary to be appointed; or
(b) within such further time as APRA allows in writing.
(7) The actuary’s report must be signed by the actuary and contain a statement of the actuary’s opinion about each of the following:
(a) the adequacy of all or part of the amount specified in the general insurer’s accounts in respect of its liabilities, and the amount that the actuary considers would be adequate in the circumstances;
(b) the accuracy of any relevant valuations made by the actuary;
(c) the assumptions used by the actuary in making those valuations;
(d) the relevance, appropriateness and accuracy of the information on which those valuations were based;
(e) any other matter in respect of which the prudential standards require a statement of the actuary’s opinion to be included in the report.
49F Offence for contravening section 49E
(1) A general insurer commits an offence if:
(a) APRA requires the insurer to appoint an actuary under section 49E; and
(b) the insurer:
(i) fails to do so within the time required by that section; or
(ii) if the insurer is required under subsection 49E(4) to appoint a different actuary—fails to appoint that actuary within the time required by that subsection.
Penalty: 100 penalty units.
(2) A general insurer commits an offence if:
(a) APRA requires the insurer to appoint an actuary under section 49E; and
(b) the insurer:
(i) fails to do so within the time required by that section; or
(ii) if the insurer is required under subsection 49E(4) to appoint a different actuary—fails to appoint that actuary within the time required by that subsection.
This is an offence of strict liability.
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 3: If a body corporate is convicted of an offence against this section, subsection 4B(3) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose a fine of up to 5 times the penalty above.
49G Who can be appointed as a section 49E actuary
(1) A person can only be appointed as an actuary for the purposes of section 49E if the person is ordinarily resident in Australia and:
(a) the person is a Fellow of The Institute of Actuaries of Australia; or
(b) APRA has approved (in writing) the person as an actuary for the purposes of section 49E.
(2) APRA may only approve a person if APRA is satisfied that the person has actuarial qualifications and experience that make the person fit to perform the functions of an actuary for the purposes of section 49E.
49H Delegate’s decision to extend time for providing actuary’s report
(1) If a delegate of APRA decides to allow, or refuse to allow, further time under paragraph 49E(6)(b), the general insurer concerned may request that APRA reconsider the delegate’s decision.
(2) The request must:
(a) be in writing and include the reasons for making the request; and
(b) be made within 7 days after the day on which the insurer is notified of the decision.
(3) Within 7 days of receiving the request, APRA must reconsider the decision and may confirm, revoke or vary the decision. APRA must give written notice to the insurer of the result of the reconsideration.
(4) If APRA does not confirm, revoke or vary the decision before the end of the 7 day period, APRA is taken to have confirmed the decision.
(5) Part VI applies to a decision by APRA under subsection (3) or (4) to confirm or vary a delegate’s decision.
Division 4—Role of auditor and actuary of a general insurer
(1) For each general insurer:
(a) the principal auditor of the insurer must audit the insurer’s yearly statutory accounts; and
(b) an auditor of the insurer must perform for the insurer the functions of an auditor set out in the prudential standards; and
(c) an auditor of the insurer must prepare, and give to the insurer, the reports (if any) required by the prudential standards to be prepared by the auditor.
(2) The general insurer must make the arrangements that are necessary to enable an auditor to do those things.
(3) The principal auditor of a general insurer must give the insurer a certificate relating to the yearly statutory accounts. The certificate must contain statements of the auditor’s opinion on the matters required by the prudential standards to be dealt with in the certificate.
(4) The reports that the prudential standards require an auditor to prepare must deal with all of the matters required by the prudential standards to be dealt with in the reports.
(1) The actuary of a general insurer appointed in accordance with section 39 must:
(a) perform for the insurer the functions of an actuary set out in the prudential standards; and
(b) prepare, and give to the insurer, the reports (if any) required by the prudential standards to be prepared by the actuary.
(2) The general insurer must make the arrangements that are necessary to enable the actuary to do those things.
(3) The reports that the prudential standards require the actuary to prepare must deal with all of the matters required by the prudential standards to be dealt with in the reports.
49L Lodgment of auditor’s certificate and actuary’s reports
(1) A general insurer must, in accordance with the prudential standards, lodge with APRA:
(a) a section 49J certificate relating to the yearly statutory accounts for each financial year of the insurer; and
(aa) the reports referred to in section 49J; and
(b) the reports referred to in section 49K.
Penalty: 300 penalty units.
(1A) If an individual:
(a) commits an offence against subsection (1) because of Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code; or
(b) commits an offence under Part 2.4 of the Criminal Code in relation to an offence against subsection (1);
he or she is punishable, on conviction, by a fine not exceeding 60 penalty units.
(2) An offence against this section is an offence of strict liability.
Note 1: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Note 2: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
49Q Keeping of accounting records
Accounting records must be kept in Australia etc.
(1) The accounting records that a general insurer keeps for the purposes of this Act (including the prudential standards) must be kept:
(a) in writing:
(i) in the English language; or
(ii) in a form in which the records are readily accessible and readily convertible into writing in the English language; and
(b) either:
(i) in Australia; or
(ii) if APRA gives written approval and the insurer meets the conditions (if any) specified in the approval—in another country specified in the approval.
(1A) The approval may be given subject to specified conditions.
Notification of address where accounting records are kept
(1B) A general insurer must notify APRA, in the approved form, of the address where the insurer’s accounting records are kept:
(a) if, immediately before the commencement of this subsection, the insurer has an authorisation under section 12—within 28 days after that commencement; or
(b) otherwise—within 28 days after the insurer is granted an authorisation under that section.
(1C) If:
(a) a general insurer has notified APRA of the address where the insurer’s accounting records are kept; and
(b) the insurer moves the accounting records to a new address;
the insurer must notify APRA, in the approved form, of the new address where the accounting records are kept.
(1D) The notification must be given within 28 days after the day on which the accounting records are moved to the new address.
Offence
(2) A general insurer commits an offence if the insurer contravenes subsection (1).
Penalty: 200 penalty units.
Note 1: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Note 2: If a body corporate is convicted of an offence against this section, subsection 4B(3) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose a fine of up to 5 times the penalty above.
Merits review
(3) Part VI applies to the following decisions:
(a) a refusal to give an approval under paragraph (1)(b);
(b) a decision to give the approval subject to conditions.
Division 6—Removal of auditors and actuaries
49R APRA may direct removal of auditor or actuary
(1) APRA may, if satisfied there is a ground under subsection (3), give a written direction to a body corporate that is a general insurer to end the appointment of a person as:
(a) an auditor of the general insurer; or
(b) the actuary of the general insurer.
(2) APRA may, if satisfied there is a ground under subsection (3), give a written direction to a body corporate that is an authorised NOHC to end the appointment of a person as:
(a) the auditor of the authorised NOHC; or
(b) the actuary of the authorised NOHC.
(3) The grounds for giving a direction to end a person’s appointment are:
(a) if the person is an auditor or the actuary of a general insurer—the person is disqualified from holding such an appointment under section 44; or
(b) the person does not meet one or more of the criteria for fitness and propriety set out in the prudential standards.
(4) Before directing a body corporate to end a person’s appointment, APRA must:
(a) give written notice to:
(i) the body corporate; and
(ii) the person; and
(b) give the body corporate and the person a reasonable opportunity to make submissions on the matter.
(5) The notice must include a statement that any submissions in response to the notice may be discussed by APRA with other persons as mentioned in paragraph (6)(b).
(6) If a submission is made in response to the notice, APRA:
(a) must have regard to the submission; and
(b) may discuss any matter contained in the submission with any persons APRA considers appropriate for the purpose of assessing the truth of the matter.
(7) A direction to end a person’s appointment takes effect on the day specified in the direction, which must be at least 7 days after the direction is made.
(8) If APRA directs a body corporate to end a person’s appointment, APRA must give the body corporate and the person a copy of the direction.
(9) The power of a body corporate to comply with a direction to end a person’s appointment may be exercised on behalf of the body corporate:
(a) by the Chair of the board of directors of the body corporate signing a written notice; or
(b) by a majority of the directors of the body corporate (excluding any director who is the subject of the direction) jointly signing a written notice.
(10) Subsection (9) does not by implication limit any other powers of a body corporate to end a person’s appointment.
(11) Part VI applies to a decision by APRA to give a direction under this section on the ground referred to in paragraph (3)(b).
(12) A direction to end a person’s appointment is not a legislative instrument.
(13) A body corporate commits an offence if:
(a) the body corporate does or fails to do an act; and
(b) by doing or failing to do the act, the body corporate fails to comply with a direction under this section.
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(14) Strict liability applies to subsection (13).
Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Part V—Investigations of general insurers etc.
(1) In this Part, unless the contrary intention appears:
affairs, in relation to a body corporate that is a general insurer, authorised NOHC or the subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC or to a body corporate associated with another body corporate, includes:
(a) the promotion, formation, membership, control, trading, dealings, business and property of the body corporate;
(b) the ownership of shares in, debentures of and prescribed interests made available by the body corporate;
(c) matters concerned with the ascertainment of the persons who are or have been financially interested in the success or failure, or apparent success or failure, of the body corporate or are or have been able to control or to influence materially the policy of the body corporate; and
(d) the circumstances under which a person acquired or disposed of, or became entitled to acquire or dispose of, shares in, debentures of or prescribed interests made available by the body corporate.
prescribed interest means an interest in a managed investment scheme within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001.
prescribed person, in relation to a body corporate that is a general insurer, authorised NOHC or the subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC, or a body corporate associated with another body corporate, means:
(a) a person who is, or has at any time been, a director, secretary, officer or employee of the body corporate;
(b) a person who acts or has at any time acted as solicitor, auditor or in any other capacity for the body corporate;
(c) a person who:
(i) has, or has at any time had, in the person’s possession any property of the body corporate;
(ii) is indebted to the body corporate; or
(iii) is capable of giving information concerning the affairs of the body corporate; and
(d) where APRA has given notice in writing to a person that APRA has reasonable grounds for believing that that person is a person referred to in paragraph (c), that person;
but does not include:
(e) a receiver, or a receiver and manager, of property of the body; or
(f) an administrator, within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001, of the body; or
(g) an administrator of a deed of company arrangement executed by the body under Part 5.3A of that Act; or
(i) a liquidator or provisional liquidator of the body.
(2) For the purposes of this Part, a body corporate is associated with another body corporate if the two bodies corporate are related to each other and:
(a) the first‑mentioned body corporate is a general insurer or authorised NOHC; or
(b) either of those bodies corporate is, or has directors who are, accustomed or under an obligation, whether formal or informal, to act in accordance with the directions, instructions or wishes of the other body corporate or of its directors;
and references in this Part to a body corporate having been associated with another body corporate shall be construed accordingly.
(3) The question whether bodies corporate are related to each other for the purposes of this Part is to be determined in the same way as the question whether bodies corporate are related to each other would be determined under the Corporations Act 2001 if, in section 46 of that Act:
(a) the reference to a body corporate that is in a position to cast, or control the casting of, more than one‑half of the maximum number of votes that might be cast at a general meeting of another body corporate were a reference to a body corporate that is in a position to cast, or control the casting of, more than one‑quarter of that number of votes; and
(b) the reference to a body corporate holding more than one‑half of the issued share capital of another body corporate were a reference to a body corporate holding more than one‑quarter of the issued share capital of another body corporate.
52 Investigation of general insurer, authorised NOHC or subsidiary by APRA or inspector
(1) Where:
(aa) it appears to APRA that a body corporate that is a general insurer or authorised NOHC:
(i) is, or is likely to become, unable to meet its liabilities; or
(ii) has contravened or failed to comply with a provision of this Act or the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 or a condition or direction applicable to it under this Act or that Act; or
(ab) it appears to APRA that there is, or there may be, a risk to the security of a general insurer’s or authorised NOHC’s assets; or
(a) it appears to APRA that there is, or there may be, a sudden deterioration in a general insurer’s or authorised NOHC’s financial condition; or
(b) it appears to APRA that information in its possession calls for the investigation of the whole or any part of the business of a general insurer or authorised NOHC;
APRA may, by notice in writing served on the body corporate, require it to show cause within such period after service of the notice, being not less than 14 days, as APRA specifies in the notice, why APRA should not:
(c) investigate the whole or any part of the business of the body corporate; or
(d) appoint a person to make such an investigation and report to APRA the results of his or her investigation.
(1AA) A notice under subsection (1) must specify which of paragraphs 1(aa), (ab), (a) or (b) is being relied on to give the notice.
(1AB) Despite subsection (1), APRA may specify a period of less than 14 days in a notice under that subsection if:
(a) APRA considers that specifying the shorter period is necessary; and
(b) the period specified is reasonable in the circumstances.
(1A) If APRA has served, or is proposing to serve, a notice under subsection (1) on a body corporate, APRA may:
(a) if the notice has been served—at any time; or
(b) otherwise—at or about the time when the notice is served;
cause a written notice to be served under subsection (1C) on a body corporate that is a subsidiary of the first‑mentioned body corporate.
(1B) If it appears to APRA that a body corporate that is a subsidiary of a body corporate that is a general insurer or authorised NOHC has contravened a provision of this Act or the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 or a condition or direction applicable to it under this Act or the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001, APRA may cause a written notice to be served under subsection (1C) on the subsidiary.
(1C) A notice referred to in subsection (1A) or (1B) may require the body corporate on which it is served to show cause, within such period after service of the notice (being not less than 14 days) as is stated in the notice, why APRA should not, on stated grounds:
(a) investigate the whole or any part of the business of the body corporate; or
(b) appoint a person to make such an investigation and report to APRA the results of the investigation.
(2) If:
(a) a body corporate on which a notice is served under subsection (1), (1A) or (1B) fails, within the period stated in the notice, to show cause to APRA’s satisfaction why an investigation should not be made; and
(b) APRA is satisfied that:
(i) if the notice was served under subsection (1)—in relation to the insurance business carried on by the body corporate; or
(ii) otherwise—in relation to any business carried on by the body corporate;
it is in the public interest that an investigation should be made;
APRA may:
(c) make the investigation itself; or
(d) in writing, appoint a person (in this Part called the inspector) to make the investigation.
(3) If:
(a) APRA has decided that an investigation of a body corporate (in this section called the first body corporate) should be made; and
(b) another body corporate (in this section called the associated body corporate) is, or has at some relevant time been, associated with the first body corporate; and
(c) APRA believes on reasonable grounds that it is necessary for the purposes of the investigation to investigate the whole or a part of the affairs of the associated body corporate;
APRA may:
(d) make an investigation into the whole or that part of the affairs of the associated body corporate; or
(e) authorise the inspector to make such an investigation.
(4) Before commencing an investigation of a body corporate, APRA or the inspector, as the case may be, must serve on the body corporate:
(a) in all cases—a written notice by APRA specifying the matters into which the investigation is to be made, being the whole or some part of affairs of the body corporate; and
(b) in the case of the inspector—a copy of the instrument appointing the inspector.
(5) The inspector is to be a person resident in Australia.
(6) To avoid doubt, this section applies to a body corporate that is, or becomes, a Chapter 5 body corporate (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001) in the same way as this section applies to any other body corporate.
(1) If APRA or the inspector, while investigating the whole or a part of the affairs of a body corporate believes on reasonable grounds that it is necessary for the purposes of the investigation to enter land or premises occupied by the body corporate or by another body corporate that is a subsidiary of the body corporate, an authorised person (if the investigation is by APRA), or the inspector, may at all reasonable times enter the land or premises and may:
(a) examine books on the land or premises that relate to the affairs of the body corporate or of the subsidiary or that he or she believes on reasonable grounds relate to those affairs;
(b) take possession of any of those books for such period as he or she thinks necessary for the purposes of the investigation; and
(c) make copies of or take extracts from any of those books.
(2) The authorised person or the inspector shall permit a person who would be entitled to inspect any books referred to in subsection (1) if they were not in the possession of the authorised person or the inspector to inspect at all reasonable times such of those books as that person would be so entitled to inspect.
55 Powers of APRA or inspector
(1) APRA or the inspector may, by notice in writing given to a person who is a prescribed person in relation to a body corporate that is a general insurer, authorised NOHC or the subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC or in relation to a body corporate that is associated with that body corporate, require that person:
(a) to produce to APRA or the inspector all or any of the books relating to the affairs of the body corporate that are in the custody or under the control of that person;
(b) to give to APRA or the inspector all reasonable assistance in connexion with the investigation; or
(c) to appear before a specified authorised person or the inspector for examination concerning matters relevant to the investigation.
(1A) APRA or the inspector may give a notice to a prescribed person in relation to a body corporate only if:
(a) APRA or the inspector is investigating the whole or part of the affairs of the body corporate or a body corporate that is associated with that body corporate; or
(b) the notice is given for the purposes of APRA’s monitoring functions under section 38.
(2) Where books are produced to APRA or the inspector under this section, APRA or the inspector may take possession of them for such period as APRA or the inspector thinks necessary for the purposes of the investigation and may make copies of and take extracts from them but shall permit a person who would be entitled to inspect any of them if they were not in the possession of APRA or the inspector to inspect at all reasonable times such of those books as that person would be so entitled to inspect.
(2A) APRA’s powers under subsection (2) to make copies of, or take extracts from, books may be exercised on APRA’s behalf by an authorised person.
(3) A person who complies with a requirement of APRA or the inspector under this section does not incur any liability to any other person by reason only of that compliance.
56 Persons to comply with requirements of APRA or the inspector
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) a requirement of APRA or the inspector under section 55 is applicable to the person; and
(b) the person refuses or fails to comply with the requirement to the extent to which the person is able to comply with it.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 3 months.
(2) A person being examined by an authorised person or the inspector is not excused from answering a question put to him or her by the authorised person or the inspector on the ground that the answer might tend to incriminate him or her but, where the person informs the authorised person or the inspector before answering the question that the answer might tend to incriminate him or her, neither the question nor the answer is admissible in evidence against him or her in criminal proceedings other than a prosecution for:
(a) an offence against subsection (1); or
(b) an offence against section 137.1 or 137.2 of the Criminal Code that relates to this section.
57 Person may be represented by a legal practitioner
A barrister or solicitor acting for a person being examined by an authorised person or the inspector:
(a) may attend the examination; and
(b) may, to the extent that the authorised person or the inspector allows:
(i) address the authorised person or the inspector; and
(ii) examine the person;
in relation to matters in respect of which the authorised person or the inspector has questioned the person.
58 Notes of examination of person
(1) An authorised person or the inspector may cause notes of an examination of a person under this Part to be recorded in writing and read to or by that person and may require that person to sign the notes and, subject to subsection 56(2), notes signed by that person may be used in evidence in proceedings under this Act against that person.
(2) A copy of the notes signed by a person shall be furnished without charge to that person upon request made by him or her in writing to APRA or the inspector.
(3) If the inspector causes notes to be recorded under this section, the notes must be given to APRA with the report of the investigation concerned.
(1) Powers under this Part may be delegated as follows:
(a) APRA’s powers may be delegated under section 15 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998;
(b) an inspector may by signed instrument delegate his or her powers to:
(i) an APRA member or an APRA staff member; or
(ii) a person included in a class of persons approved in writing by APRA for the purposes of this subparagraph.
(3) A delegate shall, on the request of an officer of a body corporate in relation to which the delegated powers are exercisable or of a person affected by the exercise of those powers, produce the instrument of delegation, or a copy of the instrument, for inspection.
60 Report of APRA or the inspector
(1) The inspector:
(a) may make one or more reports in writing to APRA during the investigation of the whole or a part of the affairs of a body corporate and shall, if so directed in writing by APRA, make such reports as are specified in the direction; and
(b) shall, on a completion or termination of the investigation, report in writing to APRA on the result of the investigation.
(1A) APRA must, on a completion or termination of an investigation made by APRA, make a report in writing on the result of the investigation.
(2) A report made on the completion of the investigation shall include:
(a) a statement of the opinion of APRA or the inspector in relation to the ability of the body corporate to meet its liabilities and the facts on which that opinion is based; and
(b) if the investigation relates to the affairs of a body corporate that is associated with a body corporate (the authorised body corporate) that is a general insurer or authorised NOHC—a statement of the opinion of APRA or inspector in relation to the effect of the association on the ability of the authorised body corporate to meet its liabilities and the facts on which that opinion is based; and
(c) the recommendations of APRA or the inspector with respect to:
(i) if the body corporate is a general insurer or authorised NOHC—whether it should continue to be a general insurer or authorised NOHC; and
(ia) any recapitalisation directions that should be given to the body corporate; and
(ii) any directions that should be given to the body corporate under section 104; and
(iii) the question whether the affairs of the body corporate should be reorganized to enable it to meet its liabilities and continue to carry on business and, if so, the way in which they should be reorganized; and
(iv) such other matters affecting the body corporate or otherwise in the public interest in relation to the insurance or other business carried on by the body corporate as APRA or the inspector thinks fit.
(3) A report made on the completion of the investigation may include statements of the opinion of APRA or the inspector in relation to the matters referred to in paragraphs (2)(a) and (b) and APRA’s or the inspector’s recommendations with respect to the matters referred to in paragraph (2)(c).
(4) APRA or the inspector shall not include in a report a recommendation relating to the institution of criminal proceedings or a statement to the effect that, in APRA or the inspector’s opinion, a specified person has committed a criminal offence.
(4A) If the inspector is of the opinion that criminal proceedings ought to be instituted or that a person has committed a criminal offence, the inspector must advise APRA, in writing, of that opinion.
(5) Subject to subsection (6), APRA shall give a copy of a report made by or to APRA under this section to the body corporate.
(6) APRA shall seek the advice of the Attorney‑General before giving a copy of a report to the body corporate and shall not give a copy to the body corporate if the Attorney‑General advises APRA that, having regard to proceedings that have been or might be instituted, a copy of the report should not be so given.
(7) Where a copy of a report has been given to the body corporate, APRA may, if APRA considers it is in the public interest to do so and after taking into consideration any advice APRA has received from the Attorney‑General, cause the whole or some part of the report to be published.
(8) A court before which proceedings whether under this Act or otherwise are brought against a body corporate or other person in respect of matters dealt with in a report under this Part may order that a copy of the report be given to the body corporate or that person.
(1) A person shall not:
(a) conceal, destroy, mutilate or alter a book relating to the affairs of a body corporate affairs of which are being investigated under this Part; or
(b) send, cause to be sent, or conspire with another person to send, out of Australia a book or any money or property belonging to or under the control of such a body corporate.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 3 months.
Note: Subsection 4B(2) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose an appropriate fine instead of, or in addition to, a term of imprisonment. If a body corporate is convicted of the offence, subsection 4B(3) of that Act allows a court to impose a fine of an amount that is not greater than 5 times the maximum fine that could be imposed by a court on an individual convicted of the same offence.
(2) In a prosecution for an offence under subsection (1), it is a defence for the person charged to prove that the person did not act with intent to defeat the purposes of this Part and did not act with intent to delay or obstruct the carrying out of the investigation under this Part.
Part VA—Investigations of unauthorised insurance
62A Investigations relating to contraventions of section 9 or 10 etc.
(1) If APRA believes on reasonable grounds that a body corporate or other person has engaged, is engaging or will engage in conduct:
(a) in contravention of section 9 or 10; or
(b) constituting the aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring of a contravention of section 9 or 10;
APRA may investigate the whole or part of the conduct or proposed conduct, or appoint a person (the inspector), in writing, to investigate the whole or part of the conduct or proposed conduct.
(2) The inspector is to be a person resident in Australia.
(1) For the purpose of an investigation under this Part:
(a) if the investigation is by APRA—an authorised person; or
(b) if APRA has appointed an inspector for the investigation—the inspector;
may, with the consent of the occupier of any premises, enter the premises for the purpose of searching for, inspecting, taking extracts from and making copies of any books containing information relevant to the investigation.
(2) If APRA believes on reasonable grounds that there are, on any premises, books containing information relevant to an investigation under this Part by APRA, an authorised person may apply to a Magistrate for a warrant under subsection (4).
(3) If an inspector believes on reasonable grounds that there are, on any premises, books containing information relevant to an investigation under this Part by the inspector, the inspector may apply to a Magistrate for a warrant under subsection (4).
(4) If, on an application under subsection (2) or (3), the Magistrate is satisfied by information on oath or affirmation:
(a) that there are, on the premises, books containing information relevant to the investigation; and
(b) that the issue of the warrant is reasonably required for the purposes of the investigation;
the Magistrate may grant a warrant authorising the authorised person or inspector, with such assistance as the authorised person or inspector thinks necessary, to enter the premises, during such hours of the day or night as the warrant specifies or, if the warrant so specifies, at any time, and if necessary by force, for the purpose of searching for, inspecting, taking extracts from and making copies of any such books.
(5) If the authorised person or inspector has entered premises in accordance with subsection (1) or a warrant under subsection (4), he or she may search for, inspect, take extracts from and make copies of any books containing information relevant to the investigation.
62C Powers of APRA or inspector
(1) If APRA believes on reasonable grounds that a person has or may have custody or control of information relevant to an investigation under this Part by APRA, APRA may, by written notice given to the person, require the person:
(a) to produce to APRA, within the time specified in the notice, all or any of the books containing information relevant to the investigation that are in the custody or under the control of the person; or
(b) to give to APRA all reasonable assistance in connection with the investigation; or
(c) to appear before a specified authorised person for examination concerning matters relevant to the investigation.
(2) If an inspector believes on reasonable grounds that a person has or may have custody or control of information relevant to an investigation under this Part by the inspector, the inspector may, by written notice given to the person, require the person:
(a) to produce to the inspector, within the time specified in the notice, all or any of the books containing information relevant to the investigation that are in the custody or under the control of the person; or
(b) to give to the inspector all reasonable assistance in connection with the investigation; or
(c) to appear before the inspector for examination concerning matters relevant to the investigation.
(3) The time specified in a notice for the purposes of paragraph (1)(a) or (2)(a) must be a time that is reasonable in the circumstances.
(4) If books are produced to APRA or the inspector under this section, APRA, the inspector or an authorised person may make copies of them.
(5) A person who complies with a requirement of APRA or the inspector under this section does not incur any liability to any other person merely because of that compliance.
62D Persons to comply with requirements of APRA or the inspector
(1) A person commits an offence if:
(a) a requirement of APRA or the inspector under section 62C is applicable to the person; and
(b) the person refuses or fails to comply with the requirement to the extent to which the person is able to comply with it.
Penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 3 months, or both.
(2) A person is not excused from complying with a requirement under section 62C on the ground that doing so might tend to incriminate the person.
(3) However, if the person is:
(a) an individual; and
(b) is required to answer questions under section 62C; and
(c) before answering the questions, the person informs APRA or the inspector that doing so might tend to incriminate him or her;
the questions or answers are not admissible in evidence against him or her in criminal proceedings other than a prosecution for:
(d) an offence against subsection (1); or
(e) an offence against section 137.1 or 137.2 of the Criminal Code that relates to this section.
62E Person may be represented by a legal practitioner
(1) A barrister or solicitor acting for a person being examined by an authorised person or the inspector:
(a) may attend the examination; and
(b) may, to the extent that the authorised person or the inspector allows:
(i) address the authorised person or the inspector; and
(ii) examine the person;
in relation to matters in respect of which the authorised person or the inspector has questioned the person.
(2) If, in the opinion of the authorised person or inspector, a person is trying to obstruct the examination by exercising rights under subsection (1), the authorised person or inspector may require the person to stop addressing the authorised person or inspector, or examining the examinee, as the case requires.
62F Notes of examination of person
(1) An authorised person or the inspector may:
(a) cause notes of an examination of a person under this Part to be recorded in writing and read to or by that person; and
(b) require that person to sign the notes.
(2) Subject to subsection 62D(3), notes signed by that person may be used in evidence in proceedings under this Act against that person.
(3) A copy of the notes signed by a person must be given without charge to that person if he or she makes a written request to APRA or the inspector.
(4) If the inspector causes notes to be recorded under this section, he or she must give the notes to APRA.
(1) Powers under this Part may be delegated as follows:
(a) APRA’s powers may be delegated under section 15 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998;
(b) an inspector may, by signed instrument, delegate his or her powers to:
(i) an APRA member or an APRA staff member; or
(ii) a person included in a class of persons approved under subsection (2).
(2) APRA may, by legislative instrument, approve a class of persons for the purposes of subparagraph (1)(b)(ii).
(3) A delegate must, on the request of a person in relation to whom the delegated powers are exercisable or of a person affected by the exercise of those powers, produce the instrument of delegation, or a copy of the instrument, for inspection.
62H Investigations to be completed within a reasonable time
(1) An investigation under this Part must be completed within a reasonable time after the investigation commenced.
(2) Within a reasonable time after the investigation has been completed, APRA must give to each person whose conduct or proposed conduct was the subject of the investigation a written notice stating:
(a) that the investigation has been completed; and
(b) whether APRA proposes that further action be taken relating to the conduct or proposed conduct.
An inspector must, on a completion or termination of the investigation, report in writing to APRA on the result of the investigation.
Part VB—Judicial management, statutory management, other external administration and winding up
Division 1—Judicial management of general insurers
62K Application for order for judicial management
(1) APRA may apply to the Federal Court for an order that a general insurer be placed under judicial management.
(2) Subject to subsection (3), a general insurer may apply to the Federal Court for an order that the general insurer be placed under judicial management.
(3) A general insurer may only apply if it has given APRA at least one month’s notice in writing of its intention to apply.
(4) On an application by APRA, the general insurer is entitled to be heard.
(5) On an application by the general insurer, APRA is entitled to be heard.
62L Order for judicial management after investigation
On an application under section 62K, the Federal Court may make an order that a general insurer be placed under judicial management if the Court is satisfied:
(a) that the insurance business of the general insurer has been investigated under Part V; and
(b) that, having regard to the results of the investigation, it is in the interests of policyholders of the general insurer that the order be made.
Note: This section and other provisions relating to judicial management do not apply to the aspects described in subsection 62ZVA(1) of the business and management of a foreign general insurer.
62M Order for judicial management on other grounds
(1) On an application under section 62K, the Federal Court may make an order that a general insurer be placed under judicial management if the Federal Court is satisfied:
(a) that:
(i) in the absence of external support, the general insurer is, or is likely to become, unable to meet its policy or other liabilities as they become due; or
(ii) the general insurer is a foreign general insurer and, in the absence of external support, is, or is likely to become, unable to meet, from its assets in Australia (other than any assets or amount excluded by the prudential standards for the purposes of paragraph 28(b)), its liabilities in Australia other than pre‑authorisation liabilities as they become due; or
(iii) the general insurer has failed to comply with a prudential standard; or
(iiia) the general insurer has failed to comply with a recapitalisation direction; or
(iv) the general insurer has failed to comply with a direction under section 104; or
(ivaa) the general insurer has failed to comply with a requirement of the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023; or
(iva) an external administrator has been appointed to a holding company of the general insurer (or a similar appointment has been made in a foreign country in respect of such a holding company), and the requirement in subsection (2) is satisfied; or
(ivb) if the general insurer is a foreign general insurer—an application for the appointment of an external administrator of the foreign general insurer, or for a similar procedure in respect of the foreign general insurer, has been made in a foreign country; or
(ivc) if the general insurer is a foreign general insurer—an external administrator has been appointed to the foreign general insurer, or a similar appointment has been made in respect of the foreign general insurer, in a foreign country; or
(v) there are reasonable grounds for believing that the financial position or management of the general insurer may be unsatisfactory; and
(b) that the time needed to make or complete an investigation of the insurance business of the general insurer under Part V would be likely to be such as to prejudice the interests of policyholders of the general insurer.
Note 1: This section and other provisions relating to judicial management do not apply to the aspects described in subsection 62ZVA(1) of the business and management of a foreign general insurer.
Note 2: Section 116A deals with assets and liabilities in Australia.
(2) For the purposes of subparagraph (1)(a)(iva), the requirement in this subsection is that the appointment mentioned in that subparagraph poses a significant threat to:
(a) the operation or soundness of the general insurer; or
(b) the interests of policyholders of the general insurer; or
(c) the stability of the financial system in Australia.
(3) The regulations may specify that a particular form of support for a general insurer is not to be considered external support for the purposes of subparagraphs (1)(a)(i) and (ii).
62N Commencement of judicial management
The judicial management of a general insurer commences:
(a) at the time specified in the order for judicial management as the time at which the judicial management is to commence; or
(b) if no time is so specified, when the order is made.
62P Moratorium—effect of judicial management on court and tribunal proceedings
(1) A person cannot begin or continue a proceeding in a court or tribunal covered by subsection (9) in respect of a general insurer if the general insurer is under judicial management.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:
(a) the court or tribunal grants leave for the proceedings to be begun or continued on the ground that the person would be caused hardship if leave were not granted; and
(b) the beginning or continuing of the proceedings is in accordance with such terms (if any) as the court or tribunal imposes.
(3) A person intending to apply for leave of the court or tribunal under paragraph (2)(a) must give APRA and the judicial manager at least 10 days notice of the intention to apply (or a shorter period, if the court or tribunal considers that exceptional circumstances make this necessary).
(4) APRA may apply to the court or tribunal to be joined as a party to the proceedings for leave. If APRA is joined as a party, the court or tribunal must have regard to APRA’s views in deciding:
(a) whether to grant leave under paragraph (2)(a); and
(b) if the court or tribunal decides to grant the leave—whether to impose terms as mentioned in paragraph (2)(b); and
(c) if the court or tribunal decides to impose such terms—the nature of those terms.
(5) The judicial manager may apply to the court or tribunal to be joined as a party to the proceedings for leave. If the judicial manager is joined as a party, the court or tribunal must have regard to the judicial manager’s views in deciding:
(a) whether to grant leave under paragraph (2)(a); and
(b) if the court or tribunal decides to grant the leave—whether to impose terms as mentioned in paragraph (2)(b); and
(c) if the court or tribunal decides to impose such terms—the nature of those terms.
(6) Subsection (1) also does not apply if the judicial manager, after considering APRA’s views, consents to the proceedings beginning or continuing.
(7) The judicial manager cannot revoke a consent given for the purposes of subsection (6).
(8) The judicial manager is not liable to an action or other proceedings for damages in respect of a refusal to give consent under subsection (6).
(9) A proceeding in a court or tribunal is covered by this subsection in respect of a general insurer if it is any of the following:
(a) a proceeding against the general insurer (including a cross‑claim or third party claim against the general insurer);
(b) a proceeding in relation to property of the general insurer;
(c) a proceeding to enforce any security (including a mortgage or charge) granted by the general insurer, or by a related body corporate of the general insurer, over any property that the general insurer owns, uses, possesses, occupies or in which the general insurer otherwise has an interest.
(10) Subsection (9) does not cover a proceeding in respect of an offence or a contravention of a provision of a law for which a pecuniary penalty (however described) may be imposed.
(11) In this section, a reference to a tribunal includes a reference to the following:
(a) an industrial tribunal;
(b) an arbitral tribunal.
62PA Moratorium—effect of judicial management on enforcement process regarding property
(1) No enforcement process in relation to property of a general insurer can be begun or proceeded with if the general insurer is under judicial management.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:
(a) the Federal Court grants leave for the process to be begun or continued on the ground that the person would be caused hardship if leave were not granted; or
(b) the beginning or continuing of the process is in accordance with such terms (if any) as the Federal Court imposes.
(3) A person intending to apply for leave of the Federal Court under paragraph (2)(a) must give APRA and the judicial manager at least 10 days notice of the intention to apply (or a shorter period, if the Federal Court considers that exceptional circumstances make this necessary).
(4) APRA may apply to the Federal Court to be joined as a party to the proceedings for leave. If APRA is joined as a party, the Federal Court must have regard to APRA’s views in deciding:
(a) whether to grant leave under paragraph (2)(a); and
(b) if the Federal Court decides to grant the leave—whether to impose terms as mentioned in paragraph (2)(b); and
(c) if the Federal Court decides to impose such terms—the nature of those terms.
(5) The judicial manager may apply to the Federal Court to be joined as a party to the proceedings for leave. If the judicial manager is joined as a party, the Federal Court must have regard to the judicial manager’s views in deciding:
(a) whether to grant leave under paragraph (2)(a); and
(b) if the Federal Court decides to grant the leave—whether to impose terms as mentioned in paragraph (2)(b); and
(c) if the Federal Court decides to impose such terms—the nature of those terms.
(6) Subsection (1) also does not apply if the judicial manager consents to the process beginning or continuing.
(7) The judicial manager cannot revoke a consent given for the purposes of subsection (6).
(8) The judicial manager is not liable to an action or other proceedings for damages in respect of a refusal to give consent under subsection (6).
62PB Moratorium—effect of judicial management on disposal of property
(1) A person must not dispose of property if:
(a) the property is owned by another person; and
(b) the other person is a general insurer; and
(c) the general insurer is under judicial management.
Note: The Federal Court may grant an injunction under section 129D in respect of a contravention of this subsection.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if the judicial manager consents to the disposal.
(3) The judicial manager is not liable to an action or other proceedings for damages in respect of a refusal to give consent under subsection (2).
62PC Moratorium—Restrictions on exercise of third party property rights
(1) Section 440B of the Corporations Act 2001 applies during a period in which a general insurer is under judicial management in the same way it applies during the administration of a company.
(2) For the purposes of this section, treat the reference in paragraph 440B(2)(a) of the Corporations Act 2001 to the administrator’s written consent as being a reference to the judicial manager’s written consent.
(3) The judicial manager is not liable to an action or other proceedings for damages in respect of a refusal to give consent as mentioned in subsection (2).
(4) This section applies despite sections 62P, 62PA and 62PB.
62PD Moratorium—effect of judicial management on supply of essential services
(1) If:
(a) a general insurer is under judicial management; and
(b) the judicial manager requests, or authorises someone else to request, a person or authority (the supplier) to supply an essential service to the general insurer in Australia; and
(c) the general insurer owes an amount to the supplier in respect of the supply of the essential service before the day on which the judicial manager took control of the general insurer’s business;
the supplier must not:
(d) refuse to comply with the request for the reason only that the amount is owing; or
(e) make it a condition of the supply of the essential service pursuant to the request that the amount is to be paid.
Note: The Federal Court may grant an injunction under section 129D in respect of a contravention of this subsection.
(2) In this section:
essential service has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act 2001.
62PE Moratorium—effect of judicial management on annual general meeting
(1) This section applies to a general insurer that is required under section 250N or section 601BR of the Corporations Act 2001 to hold an annual general meeting within a particular period.
(2) Despite section 250N and section 601BR of that Act, if the general insurer is under judicial management at the end of that period, the general insurer need not hold that annual general meeting.
62R Appointment of judicial manager
(1) If the Federal Court orders the judicial management of a general insurer the Court must, by its order, appoint a judicial manager of the general insurer.
(1A) If, subsequent to that order, a situation arises where there is no judicial manager of the general insurer, or it appears to the Federal Court that it is likely that such a situation will arise, the Federal Court may appoint another judicial manager of the general insurer.
(1B) If the Federal Court appoints 2 or more judicial managers of a general insurer, or appoints one or more additional judicial managers of a general insurer:
(a) except to the extent (if any) specified in a declaration by the Federal Court under paragraph (b), the functions and powers under this Act of a judicial manager of the general insurer may be performed or exercised by:
(i) all of the judicial managers of the general insurer acting jointly; or
(ii) each of the judicial managers of the general insurer acting individually; and
(b) at the time of appointment, the Federal Court may make a declaration for the purposes of paragraph (a), specifying limits or conditions on the judicial managers’ ability to perform functions and exercise powers jointly or individually; and
(c) treat a reference in this Act to a judicial manager as being a reference to whichever one or more of those judicial managers the case requires.
(2) The Federal Court may cancel the appointment of a judicial manager and appoint another person as judicial manager:
(a) on application by APRA; or
(b) of its own motion.
(3) APRA is entitled to be heard in proceedings before the Court for the cancellation of the appointment.
62S Remuneration of judicial manager
(1) The Federal Court may give directions about:
(a) the remuneration and allowances that a judicial manager is to receive; and
(b) who is to pay the remuneration and allowances.
(2) The Federal Court may charge the judicial manager’s remuneration and allowances on the property of the general insurer under judicial management in such order of priority in relation to any existing charges on that property as the Court thinks fit.
(3) Subsection 73(2) of the Personal Property Securities Act 2009 applies to a charge created in accordance with subsection (2).
Note 1: The effect of this subsection is that the priority between a charge and a security interest to which the Personal Property Securities Act 2009 applies is to be determined in accordance with this Act rather than the Personal Property Securities Act 2009.
Note 2: Subsection 73(2) of the Personal Property Securities Act 2009 applies to statutory interests that arise after the commencement of subsection (3) (which is the registration commencement time within the meaning of the Personal Property Securities Act 2009).
62T Effect of judicial management on powers of officers etc.
(1) Subject to subsection (3), if the Federal Court has made an order placing a general insurer under judicial management:
(a) at the time the judicial management commences:
(i) a person with the powers and functions of an officer of the general insurer immediately before that time ceases to have those powers and functions; and
(ii) if the general insurer is a foreign general insurer and there is a person with the powers and functions of an agent of the general insurer for the purposes of section 118 immediately before that time—the person ceases to have those powers and functions; and
(iii) the judicial manager appointed by the Court starts to have the powers and functions mentioned in subparagraph (i) (and, if applicable, subparagraph (ii)); and
(b) while the general insurer is under judicial management:
(i) if a person mentioned in subparagraph (a)(i) or (ii) purports to act in relation to the general insurer’s business, the purported act is invalid and of no effect; and
(ii) the judicial manager has the powers and functions of the members of the board of directors of the general insurer (collectively and individually), including the board’s powers of delegation.
(2) Subsection (1) does not remove an officer or agent of the general insurer from office.
(3) A general insurer may not issue policies without the leave of the Federal Court if the company is under judicial management.
Note: This section and other provisions relating to judicial management do not apply to the aspects described in subsection 62ZVA(1) of the business and management of a foreign general insurer.
(4) In this section, officer has the same meaning as it has in the Corporations Act 2001.
62U Effect on external administrator of judicial manager managing general insurer
(1) The appointment of an external administrator of a general insurer is terminated when the judicial management of the general insurer commences.
(2) An external administrator of a general insurer must not be appointed while the general insurer is under judicial management.
(3) If:
(a) a person who ceased to be the external administrator of a general insurer under subsection (1); or
(b) a purported external administrator of a general insurer appointed in contravention of subsection (2);
purports to act in relation to the general insurer’s business while the general insurer is under judicial management, the purported act is invalid and of no effect.
(4) As soon as possible after the Federal Court orders the judicial management of a general insurer and appoints a judicial manager, the judicial manager must inform the external administrator (if any) of the general insurer that the general insurer is under judicial management. However, failure to inform the external administrator does not affect the operation of this section.
62V Judicial management not ground for denial of obligations
(1) This section applies if a body corporate is party to a contract, whether the proper law of the contract is:
(a) Australian law (including the law of a State or Territory); or
(b) law of a foreign country (including the law of part of a foreign country).
(2) None of the matters mentioned in subsection (3) allows the contract, or a party to the contract (other than the body corporate), to do any of the following:
(a) deny any obligations under the contract;
(b) accelerate any debt under the contract;
(c) close out any transaction relating to the contract;
(d) enforce any security under the contract.
(3) The matters are as follows:
(a) the making by the Federal Court of an order that the body corporate be placed under judicial management;
(b) the commencement of the judicial management of the body corporate;
(c) if the body corporate is a member of a relevant group of bodies corporate:
(i) the making by the Federal Court of an order that another member of the group be placed under judicial management; or
(ii) the commencement of the judicial management of another member of the group.
62W Continued application of other Parts of Act
(1) None of the matters mentioned in subsection (2) affect:
(a) the continued operation of other Parts of this Act in relation to a general insurer; or
(b) the operation of the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 or the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023 in relation to a general insurer; or
(c) the obligation of a general insurer to comply with those other Parts and those Acts.
(2) The matters are as follows:
(a) the making by the Federal Court of an order that the general insurer be placed under judicial management;
(b) the commencement of the judicial management of the general insurer.
62X Federal Court’s control of judicial manager
(1) A judicial manager is subject to the control of the Federal Court.
(2) In addition to duties imposed by this Part, a judicial manager has such duties as the Federal Court directs.
(3) A judicial manager may apply to the Federal Court at any time for instructions:
(a) as to the way in which the judicial management should be conducted; or
(b) in relation to any matter arising during the judicial management.
(4) Before applying to the Federal Court for instructions, the judicial manager must:
(a) inform APRA that he or she intends to make the application; and
(b) give APRA written details of the application.
(5) APRA is entitled to be heard on the application.
62Y Powers of judicial manager
(1) The judicial manager of a general insurer has the following powers:
(a) to bring or defend any legal proceedings in the name and on behalf of the general insurer;
(b) to appoint a legal practitioner to help him or her in the performance of his or her duties;
(c) to appoint an actuary (other than the actuary appointed for the purposes of section 39) to help him or her in the performance of his or her duties;
(d) to sell or otherwise dispose of all or any of the property of the general insurer;
(e) to do all acts and execute in the name and on behalf of the general insurer all deeds, receipts and other documents;
(f) for the purpose of paragraph (d), to use the general insurer’s common or official seal;
(g) subject to the Bankruptcy Act 1966, to prove in the bankruptcy of any debtor of the general insurer or under any deed executed under that Act;
(h) to draw, accept, make and endorse any bill of exchange or promissory note in the name and on behalf of the general insurer;
(i) to obtain credit, whether on the security of the general insurer or otherwise;
(j) to take out letters of administration of the estate of a deceased debtor, and to do anything necessary for obtaining payment of any money due from a debtor, or his or her estate, that cannot conveniently be done in the name of the general insurer;
(k) to appoint an agent to do anything that it is not practicable for the judicial manager to do personally or that it is unreasonable to expect him or her to do personally;
(l) such other powers as the Federal Court directs.
(2) The powers conferred by this section are in addition to powers conferred on a judicial manager by any other provision of this Part.
62Z Judicial manager’s additional powers to facilitate recapitalisation
Powers
(1) A judicial manager of a general insurer that is a company that has a share capital and is registered under the Corporations Act 2001 may do one or more of the following acts on terms determined by the judicial manager:
(a) issue shares, or rights to acquire shares, in the company;
(b) cancel shares, or rights to acquire shares, in the company;
(c) reduce the company’s share capital by cancelling any paid‑up share capital that is not represented by available assets;
(d) sell shares, or rights to acquire shares, in the company;
(e) vary or cancel rights or restrictions attached to shares in a class of shares in the company.
Note: Before doing such an act, the judicial manager will usually need to get and consider a report on the fair value of each share or right concerned (see section 62ZA), and will need to report to the Federal Court and obtain the court’s order for the act (see sections 62ZI and 62ZJ).
Giving company members notice of exercise of powers
(2) As soon as practicable after doing an act described in paragraph (1)(a), (b), (c) or (e) or subsection (3), the judicial manager must give written notice to the persons who were members (under section 231 of the Corporations Act 2001) of the company just before the act, identifying the act and explaining its effect on their interests as members.
(3) One of the acts to which subsection (2) relates is the offering of shares, or rights to acquire shares, in the company for sale under paragraph (1)(d).
Exercise of powers despite other laws etc.
(4) A judicial manager may do an act under subsection (1) despite:
(a) the Corporations Act 2001 (without limiting the scope of section 127B of this Act); and
(b) the company’s constitution; and
(c) any contract or arrangement to which the company is party; and
(d) any listing rules of a financial market in whose official list the company is included.
62ZA Considering report before acting under section 62Z
Getting and considering report on fair value of shares or rights
(1) Before determining terms for an act under subsection 62Z(1), the judicial manager must:
(a) obtain a report meeting the requirements in subsection (2) of this section on the fair value of the shares or rights concerned from an expert who is not an associate of the judicial manager, or of the company, under Division 2 of Part 1.2 of the Corporations Act 2001; and
(b) consider the report;
unless APRA determines under subsection (8) that this subsection does not apply in relation to that act relating to those shares or rights.
Content of report
(2) The report must set out:
(a) the amount that is, in the expert’s opinion, the fair value for each share or right concerned; and
(b) the reasons for forming the opinion; and
(c) any relationship between the expert and any of the following persons:
(i) the judicial manager;
(ii) a person who is an associate of the judicial manager under Division 2 of Part 1.2 of the Corporations Act 2001;
(iii) the company;
(iv) a person who is an associate of the company under Division 2 of Part 1.2 of the Corporations Act 2001;
including any circumstances in which the expert gives them advice, or acts on their behalf, in the proper performance of the functions attaching to the expert’s professional capacity or business relationship with them; and
(d) any financial or other interest of the expert that could reasonably be regarded as being capable of affecting the expert’s ability to give an unbiased opinion in relation to the matter being reported on.
Determining fair value of shares
(3) In determining for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a) the amount that is, in the expert’s opinion, the fair value for each share concerned, the expert must:
(a) first, assess the value of the company as a whole, in accordance with the assumptions (if any) notified to the expert by the Minister for the valuation of the company; and
(b) then allocate that value among the classes of shares in the company that either have been issued or that the judicial manager proposes to issue (taking into account the relative financial risk, and voting and distribution rights, of the classes); and
(c) then allocate the value of each class pro rata among the shares in that class that either have been issued or that the judicial manager proposes to issue (without allowing a premium or applying a discount for particular shares in that class).
Assumptions for valuation of company
(4) The Minister may give the expert written notice of assumptions for the valuation of the company. The Minister may, by further written notice given to the expert, revoke, but not vary, notice of the assumptions. A notice under this subsection is not a legislative instrument.
Determining fair value of rights
(5) In determining for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a) the amount that is, in the expert’s opinion, the fair value for each right concerned, the expert must act in accordance with the assumptions (if any) notified to the expert by the Minister for the valuation of the right.
Assumptions for valuation of rights
(6) The Minister may give the expert written notice of assumptions for the valuation of the rights concerned. The Minister may, by further written notice given to the expert, revoke, but not vary, notice of the assumptions. A notice under this subsection is not a legislative instrument.
Contravention does not invalidate act
(7) A contravention of subsection (1), (2), (3), (5) or (9) does not affect the validity of anything done under section 62Z.
Exemption from subsection (1)
(8) APRA may determine in writing that subsection (1) does not apply in relation to an act relating to shares or rights if APRA is satisfied that delaying the act to enable compliance with that subsection in relation to the act would detrimentally affect:
(a) policyholders of the general insurer concerned; and
(b) financial system stability in Australia.
(9) APRA must:
(a) publish a copy of a determination under subsection (8) in the Gazette; and
(b) give a copy of a determination under subsection (8) to the judicial manager concerned.
(10) A determination made under subsection (8) is not a legislative instrument.
62ZB Act under section 62Z not ground for denial of obligations
(1) This section applies if a body corporate is party to a contract, whether the proper law of the contract is:
(a) Australian law (including the law of a State or Territory); or
(b) law of a foreign country (including the law of part of a foreign country).
(2) None of the matters mentioned in subsection (3) allows the contract, or a party to the contract (other than the body corporate), to do any of the following:
(a) deny any obligations under the contract;
(b) accelerate any debt under the contract;
(c) close out any transaction relating to the contract;
(d) enforce any security under the contract.
(3) The matters are as follows:
(a) a judicial manager doing an act under subsection 62Z(1) relating to the body corporate;
(b) if the body corporate is a member of a relevant group of bodies corporate—a judicial manager doing an act under subsection 62Z(1) relating to another member of the group.
62ZC Application by APRA for instructions to judicial manager
(1) APRA may apply to the Federal Court for an order that the Court give instructions to the judicial manager relating to the conduct of the judicial management of a general insurer.
(2) The judicial manager is entitled to be heard on the application.
62ZD Request by APRA for information
(1) APRA may require a judicial manager, by written notice given to the judicial manager, to give APRA information about one or more of the following matters:
(a) the conduct of the judicial management;
(b) the financial position of the general insurer under judicial management;
(c) a matter that APRA considers will enable APRA to perform APRA’s functions under Part VC.
(2) The notice must specify a reasonable period within which the information must be given to APRA.
(3) A judicial manager commits an offence if:
(a) APRA requires the judicial manager to give APRA information under subsection (1); and
(b) the judicial manager refuses or fails to give the information.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 100 penalty units, or both.
(4) A judicial manager commits an offence if:
(a) APRA requires the judicial manager to give APRA information under subsection (1); and
(b) the judicial manager refuses or fails to give the information.
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(5) An offence against subsection (4) is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
62ZE Duration of judicial management
If the Federal Court orders that a general insurer be placed under judicial management, the general insurer remains under judicial management until:
(a) the judicial management is cancelled; or
(b) the Court orders that the general insurer be wound up.
62ZF Cancellation of judicial management
(1) A judicial manager appointed to manage a general insurer may apply to the Federal Court for an order cancelling the judicial management.
(2) Any other interested person may apply to the Federal Court for an order cancelling the judicial management of a general insurer.
(3) On an application under subsection (1) or (2), the Federal Court may cancel the order for the judicial management of the general insurer if it appears to the Court:
(a) that the purpose of the order has been fulfilled; or
(b) that for any reason it is undesirable that the order remain in force.
(4) Before applying to the Federal Court under subsection (1) or (2), the judicial manager or interested person must:
(a) inform APRA that he or she intends to make the application; and
(b) give APRA written details of the application.
(5) At the time when an order cancelling the judicial management of the general insurer comes into force:
(a) the judicial manager ceases to have the powers and functions of an officer of the general insurer; and
(b) the board of directors or other governing body of the general insurer starts to have those powers; and
(c) if the general insurer is a foreign general insurer and there is a person appointed as an agent of the general insurer for the purposes of section 118—the person starts to have the powers and functions of such an agent.
(6) APRA is entitled to be heard on any application made under subsection (1) or (2).
62ZG How judicial manager is to manage
The judicial manager of a general insurer must conduct the judicial management as efficiently and economically as possible.
62ZH Disclaimer of onerous property
Division 7A (Disclaimer of onerous property) of Part 5.6 of the Corporations Act 2001 applies in relation to the disclaimer of property of a general insurer by a judicial manager of the general insurer as if:
(a) the general insurer were a company for the purposes of that Division; and
(b) the judicial manager were the liquidator of the company; and
(c) a reference in that Division to the Court were a reference to the Federal Court; and
(d) subsection 568(10) of the Corporations Act 2001 were omitted; and
(e) the policyholders of the general insurer were the company’s creditors for the purposes of subsections 568B(3) and 568E(5) of the Corporations Act 2001.
Note: One effect of this is that the judicial manager of a general insurer has essentially the same powers and duties relating to the disclaimer of property as a liquidator of a company.
62ZI Report by judicial manager
(1) As soon as possible after starting to manage a general insurer, a judicial manager must file with the Federal Court a report that:
(a) recommends the course of action listed in subsection (2) that is, in his or her opinion, most advantageous to the general interest of the policyholders of the general insurer while promoting financial system stability in Australia; and
(b) sets out the reasons for that recommendation.
(2) The following are the possible courses of action:
(a) to transfer the business of the general insurer to another general insurer under Division 3A of Part III (whether the policies issued by the general insurer continue for the original sums insured, with the addition of bonuses that attach to the policies, or for reduced amounts);
(aa) to transfer the business, or part of the business, of the company to another company under section 25 of the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999;
(ab) to transfer shares in the company to another company under section 25AA of the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999;
(b) to allow the general insurer to carry on its business after a period of judicial management (whether the policies issued by the general insurer continue for the original sums insured, with the addition of bonuses that attach to the policies, or for reduced amounts);
(c) to do one or more of the acts described in subsection 62Z(1) (which is about various measures to recapitalise the general insurer), if that subsection applies to the general insurer;
(d) to wind up the general insurer;
(e) to take such other course of action as the judicial manager considers desirable, which may, for example, be a course of action that includes either or both of the following:
(i) altering the constitution, rules or other arrangements for governance of the general insurer, if it is registered under the Corporations Act 2001, to enable or facilitate the performance of the judicial manager’s functions and duties, the exercise of the judicial manager’s powers or a course of action described in paragraph (a), (b), (c) or (d);
(ii) one or more of the courses of action described in paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d).
(3) A report may recommend different courses of action in respect of different parts of a general insurer’s business.
(4) If the Federal Court makes an order under section 62ZJ giving effect to a course or courses referred to in paragraph (2)(a), (b), (c) or (e) of this section, the judicial manager may file with the Court a further report or further reports dealing with matters to which a report under subsection (1) of this section may relate.
(5) A report under subsection (4) must set out the reasons for any recommendation made in the report.
(6) As soon as possible after filing a report under this section, the judicial manager must:
(a) give a copy of it to APRA; and
(b) apply to the Federal Court for an order to give effect to the course or courses of action stated in the report.
(7) A report, or a copy of a report, under this section must be available for inspection by any person:
(a) at the Registry of the Federal Court in which the report is filed during the business hours of that Registry; and
(b) at such other place (if any) as APRA determines.
62ZJ Order of Federal Court on report of judicial manager
(1) On an application for an order to give effect to a course or courses of action recommended in a report under section 62ZI:
(a) APRA and any other person interested is entitled to be heard; and
(b) the Federal Court may make an order giving effect to such course or courses of action as it considers in the circumstances to be most advantageous to the general interest of the policyholders of the general insurer concerned, while promoting financial system stability in Australia.
(2) The course or courses of action to which an order may give effect may be one or more of the following:
(a) one or more of the courses of action set out in subsection 62ZI(2);
(b) one or more other courses of action.
(3) An order under this section:
(a) is binding on all persons; and
(b) takes effect despite anything in any of the following:
(i) the Corporations Act 2001 (without limiting the scope of section 127B of this Act);
(ii) the constitution or other rules of the general insurer;
(iii) any contract or arrangement to which the general insurer is party;
(iv) any listing rules of a financial market in whose official list the general insurer is included.
62ZK Transfer of business to another general insurer
(1) If the Federal Court orders the transfer of the business of a general insurer to another general insurer, the judicial manager must prepare a scheme for the transfer in accordance with Division 3A of Part III.
(2) Until the Federal Court confirms the scheme under that Part, the general insurer continues to be under judicial management.
A judicial manager appointed under this Division may resign the appointment as judicial manager by filing with the Federal Court a signed notice of resignation.
(1) A judicial manager, or a person acting on behalf of a judicial manager, is not subject to any liability (whether civil or criminal) in respect of anything done, or omitted to be done, in the exercise or performance, or the purported exercise or performance, of powers, functions or duties conferred or imposed on the judicial manager by or under this Act.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to an act or omission in bad faith.
(3) A judicial manager is not liable under section 588G, 588GAB or 588GAC of the Corporations Act 2001. This subsection does not limit the scope of subsection (1).
Signpost to secrecy obligations
(4) Part 6 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998 prohibits certain disclosures of information received by judicial managers under this Act.
62ZN Exceptions to Part IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010
For the purposes of subsection 51(1) of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010, the following things are specified and specifically authorised:
(a) the acquisition of assets in:
(i) a sale or disposal of property of a general insurer under this Division by a judicial manager of the general insurer; or
(ii) a transfer of insurance business of a general insurer under a scheme prepared by a judicial manager of the general insurer and confirmed (with or without modifications) by the Federal Court under Division 3A of Part III;
(whether the assets are shares in another body corporate or other assets);
(b) an agreement or deed for carrying out a transfer described in subparagraph (a)(ii);
(c) arrangements necessary to give effect to a scheme described in subparagraph (a)(ii);
(d) the acquisition of shares in a general insurer as a direct result of:
(i) the issue or sale of the shares under this Division by a judicial manager of the general insurer; or
(ii) the exercise of a right to acquire shares that was issued or sold under this Division by a judicial manager of the general insurer.
Division 1A—Statutory management of general insurers
Subdivision A—General provisions relating to statutory management
62ZOA Consequences of inability or failure of general insurer etc. to meet certain requirements
Appointment of administrator or control by APRA
(1) APRA may take control of a general insurer’s business or appoint an administrator to take control of the general insurer’s business if both of the following requirements are met:
(a) APRA is satisfied of the matters of which the Federal Court is required to be satisfied for the purposes of section 62L or 62M;
(b) subsection (2) applies.
(2) This subsection applies if APRA is satisfied that at least one of the following situations exists:
(a) both:
(i) an AFS statutory manager has taken control of a body corporate under this Act, the Banking Act 1959 or the Life Insurance Act 1995 (or APRA intends for that to occur); and
(ii) the general insurer and the body corporate are related bodies corporate;
(b) both:
(i) the general insurer’s financial position is deteriorating rapidly, or is likely to deteriorate rapidly; and
(ii) failure to respond quickly to the deterioration would be likely to prejudice the interests of policyholders of the insurer;
(c) it is likely that the insurer will be unable to carry on insurance business in Australia consistently with the stability of the financial system in Australia;
(d) an external administrator has been appointed to a holding company of the general insurer (or a similar appointment has been made in a foreign country in respect of such a holding company), and the appointment poses a significant threat to:
(i) the operation or soundness of the general insurer; or
(ii) the interests of policyholders of the general insurer; or
(iii) the stability of the financial system in Australia;
(e) if the general insurer is a foreign general insurer:
(i) an application for the appointment of an external administrator of the foreign general insurer, or for a similar procedure in respect of the foreign general insurer, has been made in a foreign country; or
(ii) an external administrator has been appointed to the foreign general insurer, or a similar appointment has been made in respect of the foreign general insurer, in a foreign country.
(3) APRA may take any of the actions mentioned in subsection (4) in relation to a body corporate (the target body corporate) if:
(a) the target body corporate is a body corporate that is any of the following:
(i) an authorised NOHC of a general insurer (the relevant general insurer);
(ii) a subsidiary of an authorised NOHC of a general insurer (also the relevant general insurer);
(iii) a subsidiary of a general insurer (also the relevant general insurer); and
(b) the condition in subsection (5), (6) or (7) is satisfied; and
(c) the target body corporate is incorporated in Australia; and
(d) the target body corporate is not a body corporate of a kind specified in regulations (if any) made for the purposes of this paragraph.
(4) The actions are as follows:
(a) taking control of the business of the target body corporate;
(b) appointing an administrator to take control of the business of the target body corporate.
(5) The condition in this subsection is satisfied if:
(a) either:
(i) an Insurance Act statutory manager has taken control of the relevant general insurer; or
(ii) the conditions in paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) are satisfied in relation to the relevant general insurer, and APRA intends that an Insurance Act statutory manager will take control of the relevant general insurer; and
(b) APRA considers that the target body corporate provides services that are, or conducts business that is, essential to the capacity of the relevant general insurer to maintain its operations.
(6) The condition in this subsection is satisfied if:
(a) either:
(i) an Insurance Act statutory manager has taken control of the relevant general insurer; or
(ii) the conditions in paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) are satisfied in relation to the relevant general insurer, and APRA intends that an Insurance Act statutory manager will take control of the relevant general insurer; and
(b) APRA considers that it is necessary for an Insurance Act statutory manager to take control of the target body corporate, in order to facilitate the resolution of any of the following:
(i) the relevant general insurer;
(ii) an authorised NOHC of the relevant general insurer;
(iii) a relevant group of bodies corporate of which the relevant general insurer is a member;
(iv) a particular member or particular members of such a group.
(7) The condition in this subsection is satisfied if:
(a) there is an external administrator of the target body corporate, or APRA considers that, in the absence of external support:
(i) the target body corporate may become unable to meet its obligations; or
(ii) the target body corporate may suspend payment; and
(b) APRA considers that it is necessary to take an action mentioned in subsection (4) in respect of the target body corporate in order to enable the relevant general insurer to maintain its operations, or in order to facilitate the resolution of any of the following:
(i) the relevant general insurer;
(ii) an authorised NOHC of the relevant general insurer;
(iii) a relevant group of bodies corporate of which the relevant general insurer is a member;
(iv) a particular member or particular members of such a group.
(8) If:
(a) APRA is in control of a body corporate’s business under this Subdivision—APRA is the Insurance Act statutory manager of the body corporate; or
(b) an administrator appointed by APRA is in control of a body corporate’s business under this Subdivision—the administrator is the Insurance Act statutory manager of the body corporate.
Note: This section and other provisions relating to statutory management do not apply to the aspects described in subsection 62ZVA(1) of the business and management of a foreign general insurer.
(9) If APRA appoints 2 or more Insurance Act statutory managers of a body corporate, or appoints one or more additional Insurance Act statutory managers of a body corporate:
(a) the functions and powers under this Act of an Insurance Act statutory manager of the body corporate may be performed or exercised by:
(i) all of the Insurance Act statutory managers of the body corporate acting jointly; or
(ii) each of the Insurance Act statutory managers of the body corporate acting individually (except to the extent (if any) specified in a notice given by APRA under paragraph (b)); and
(b) at the time of appointment, APRA may give all of the Insurance Act statutory managers of the body corporate a notice in writing for the purposes of subparagraph (a)(ii), specifying limits or conditions on their ability to perform functions and exercise powers individually; and
(c) treat a reference in this Act to an Insurance Act statutory manager as being a reference to whichever one or more of those Insurance Act statutory managers the case requires.
62ZOB Start of control of body corporate’s business by Insurance Act statutory manager
(1) After the decision that an Insurance Act statutory manager will take control of a body corporate’s business is made, APRA must give the body corporate written notice that the Insurance Act statutory manager will take, or is taking, control of the business.
Note: Subsections 62ZOQ(4) and 62ZOZA(3) also require APRA to give notice of the taking of control.
(2) An Insurance Act statutory manager takes control of a body corporate’s business:
(a) at the time specified in a notice under this section as the time when the Insurance Act statutory manager takes control of the business (which must not be earlier than the notice is given); or
(b) if a notice under this section does not specify a time as the time when the Insurance Act statutory manager takes control of the business—at the time the notice is given.
(3) A notice under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.
62ZOC Insurance Act statutory managers—termination of control
Conditions necessary for termination of control
(1) If APRA assumes control of a body corporate’s business or appoints an administrator of a body corporate’s business, APRA must ensure that either it or an administrator of the body corporate’s business has control of the body corporate’s business until:
(a) APRA considers that it is no longer necessary for it or an administrator to remain in control of the body corporate’s business; or
(b) APRA has applied for the body corporate to be wound up.
A termination of control that is permitted under this section is called an ultimate termination of control.
Note: This provision does not prevent a change, or changes, between control of a body corporate’s business by APRA and an administrator or between administrators.
Events to precede termination
(2) Before making an ultimate termination of control by an Insurance Act statutory manager of a body corporate’s business, APRA must:
(a) do both of the following:
(i) ensure that directors of the body corporate have been appointed or elected under the body corporate’s constitution at a meeting called by the statutory manager in accordance with the body corporate’s constitution;
(ii) if the body corporate is a foreign general insurer—appoint an agent in Australia for the purpose of section 118 by instrument in writing; or
(b) do both of the following:
(i) appoint directors of the body corporate by instrument in writing;
(ii) if the body corporate is a foreign general insurer—appoint an agent in Australia for the purpose of section 118 by instrument in writing; or
(c) ensure that a liquidator has been appointed:
(i) unless subparagraph (ii) applies—for the body corporate; or
(ii) if the body corporate is a foreign general insurer—for the body corporate in relation to its Australian business assets and liabilities.
Power to terminate control
(3) If the requirements in subsections (1) and (2) are satisfied, APRA may by instrument in writing make an ultimate termination of control of a body corporate’s business by an Insurance Act statutory manager.
(4) If the Insurance Act statutory manager at the time of the termination is an administrator, the instrument of termination also operates as a termination of the appointment of the administrator. A copy of the instrument must be given to the administrator. However, mere failure to give the copy to the administrator does not affect the termination of the appointment.
Period of director’s appointment
(5) If a director is elected or appointed under subsection (2), the director takes office on the termination of the Insurance Act statutory manager’s control of the body corporate’s business. If the director was appointed by APRA, the director holds office until the body corporate’s next annual general meeting, subject to any terms and conditions imposed by APRA on the director’s appointment. If the director was appointed or elected under the body corporate’s constitution, the constitution governs the appointment.
Note: For further information about what happens when an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of a body corporate’s business, see Subdivision B.
62ZOD Insurance Act statutory manager’s powers and functions
Insurance Act statutory manager’s powers and functions include powers and functions of board
(1) An Insurance Act statutory manager has the powers and functions of the members of the board of directors of the body corporate (collectively and individually), including the board’s powers of delegation.
Note: When an Insurance Act statutory manager takes control of the business of a body corporate, the directors of the body corporate cease to hold office (see section 62ZOP).
Insurance Act statutory manager’s power to obtain information
(2) An Insurance Act statutory manager may, for the purposes of this Division, require a person who has, at any time, been an officer of the body corporate to give the Insurance Act statutory manager any information relating to the business of the body corporate that the Insurance Act statutory manager requires. A requirement to give information may include a requirement to produce books, accounts or documents.
(3) A person who is or has been an officer of a body corporate commits an offence if:
(a) there is an Insurance Act statutory manager in relation to the body corporate; and
(b) under subsection (2), the Insurance Act statutory manager requires the person to give information or to produce books, accounts or documents; and
(c) the person fails to comply with the requirement.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
Note 1: Subsection 4B(2) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose a fine instead of, or in addition to, a term of imprisonment. The maximum fine a court may impose is worked out as provided in that subsection.
Note 2: If a body corporate is convicted of an offence against this subsection, subsection 4B(3) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to impose a fine of up to 5 times the maximum fine worked out as mentioned in Note 2.
(4) An individual is not excused from complying with a requirement under subsection (2) to give information on the ground that doing so would tend to incriminate the individual or make the individual liable to a penalty.
(5) If:
(a) before giving information in compliance with a requirement under subsection (2), an individual claims that giving the information might tend to incriminate the individual or make the individual liable to a penalty; and
(b) giving the information might in fact tend to incriminate the individual or make the individual so liable;
the information given in compliance with the requirement is not admissible in evidence against the individual in a criminal proceeding or a proceeding for the imposition of a penalty, other than a proceeding in respect of the falsity of the information.
(6) Subsections (4) and (5) apply to the production of books, accounts or documents in a corresponding way to the way in which they apply to the giving of information.
Insurance Act statutory manager’s power to sell whole or part of body corporate’s business
(7) An Insurance Act statutory manager may sell or otherwise dispose of the whole or any part of the body corporate’s business. The sale or disposal may occur on any terms and conditions that the Insurance Act statutory manager considers appropriate.
Insurance Act statutory manager’s powers to alter body corporate’s constitution etc.
(8) An Insurance Act statutory manager may, if the body corporate concerned is registered under the Corporations Act 2001, alter the body corporate’s constitution, rules or other arrangements for governance if the alteration:
(a) is necessary or convenient for enabling or facilitating the performance of the Insurance Act statutory manager’s functions and duties, or the exercise of the Insurance Act statutory manager’s other powers, under this Division in relation to the body corporate; and
(b) promotes:
(i) the protection of the policyholders of the body corporate; and
(ii) financial system stability in Australia.
(9) An Insurance Act statutory manager may do an act under subsection (7) or (8) despite:
(a) the Corporations Act 2001; and
(b) the body corporate’s constitution; and
(c) any contract or arrangement to which the body corporate is party; and
(d) any listing rules of a financial market in whose official list the body corporate is included.
Interpretation
(10) In this section:
officer has the meaning given by section 9 of the Corporations Act 2001.
62ZOE Safeguards on exercise of Insurance Act statutory manager’s powers and functions
(1) Despite anything else in this Subdivision, an Insurance Act statutory manager of a body corporate (the body corporate under management) may not perform a function or exercise a power under section 62ZOD if:
(a) either or both of subsections (2) and (3) apply; and
(b) the performance of the function or the exercise of the power is not for the purposes of:
(i) an act of the Insurance Act statutory manager under subsection 62ZOF(1); or
(ii) Part 3 or 4 of the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999.
(2) This subsection applies if:
(a) the body corporate under management is not a general insurer; and
(b) the performance or the exercise would result in:
(i) the provision of services by the body corporate under management to a related body corporate of the body corporate under management; or
(ii) the provision of services by a related body corporate of the body corporate under management to the body corporate under management; or
(iii) subject to subsection (4), the transfer of assets between the body corporate under management and another body corporate (otherwise than in the ordinary course of business); and
(c) the performance or the exercise is not required or permitted by a binding arrangement that was in existence immediately before the Insurance Act statutory manager started to be in control of the business of the body corporate under management; and
(d) the provision or transfer is not for fair value.
(3) This subsection applies if:
(a) the body corporate under management is an authorised NOHC of a general insurer; and
(b) the performance or the exercise requires using funds of the body corporate or a subsidiary of the body corporate to increase the level of capital of the general insurer to a specified level; and
(c) the shareholders of the body corporate have not agreed, by ordinary resolution, to that use of the funds.
(4) Treat the requirement in subparagraph (2)(b)(iii) as not being met if:
(a) the body corporate under management is an authorised NOHC of a general insurer; and
(b) the transfer of assets mentioned in that subparagraph is a transfer of funds to increase the level of capital of the general insurer to a specified level; and
(c) the shareholders of the body corporate have agreed, by ordinary resolution, to that use of the funds.
62ZOF Insurance Act statutory manager’s additional powers to facilitate recapitalisation
Powers
(1) An Insurance Act statutory manager of a body corporate that is a company that has a share capital and is registered under the Corporations Act 2001 may do one or more of the following acts on terms determined by the Insurance Act statutory manager:
(a) issue shares, or rights to acquire shares, in the company;
(b) cancel shares, or rights to acquire shares, in the company;
(c) reduce the company’s share capital by cancelling any paid‑up share capital that is not represented by available assets;
(d) sell shares, or rights to acquire shares, in the company;
(e) vary or cancel rights or restrictions attached to shares in a class of shares in the company.
Note: Before doing such an act, the Insurance Act statutory manager will usually need to get and consider a report on the fair value of each share or right concerned: see section 62ZOG.
Giving company members notice of exercise of powers
(2) As soon as practicable after doing an act described in paragraph (1)(a), (b), (c) or (e) or subsection (3), the Insurance Act statutory manager must give written notice to the persons who were members (under section 231 of the Corporations Act 2001) of the company just before the act, identifying the act and explaining its effect on their interests as members.
(3) One of the acts to which subsection (2) relates is the offering of shares, or rights to acquire shares, in the company for sale under paragraph (1)(d).
Exercise of powers despite other laws etc.
(4) An Insurance Act statutory manager may do an act under subsection (1) despite:
(a) the Corporations Act 2001; and
(b) the company’s constitution; and
(c) any contract or arrangement to which the company is party; and
(d) any listing rules of a financial market in whose official list the company is included.
Section does not apply to foreign general insurers etc.
(5) This section does not apply in relation to a body corporate that is:
(a) a foreign general insurer; or
(b) a subsidiary of a foreign general insurer; or
(c) an authorised NOHC of a foreign general insurer.
62ZOG Considering report before acting under section 62ZOF
Getting and considering report on fair value of shares or rights
(1) Before determining terms for an act under subsection 62ZOF(1), the Insurance Act statutory manager must:
(a) obtain a report meeting the requirements in subsection (2) of this section on the fair value of the shares or rights concerned from an expert who is not an associate of the statutory manager, or of the company, under Division 2 of Part 1.2 of the Corporations Act 2001; and
(b) consider the report;
unless APRA determines under subsection (8) that this subsection does not apply in relation to that act relating to those shares or rights.
Content of report
(2) The report must set out:
(a) the amount that is, in the expert’s opinion, the fair value for each share or right concerned; and
(b) the reasons for forming the opinion; and
(c) any relationship between the expert and any of the following persons:
(i) the Insurance Act statutory manager;
(ii) a person who is an associate of the Insurance Act statutory manager under Division 2 of Part 1.2 of the Corporations Act 2001;
(iii) the body corporate;
(iv) a person who is an associate of the body corporate under Division 2 of Part 1.2 of the Corporations Act 2001;
including any circumstances in which the expert gives them advice, or acts on their behalf, in the proper performance of the functions attaching to the expert’s professional capacity or business relationship with them; and
(d) any financial or other interest of the expert that could reasonably be regarded as being capable of affecting the expert’s ability to give an unbiased opinion in relation to the matter being reported on.
Determining fair value of shares
(3) In determining for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a) the amount that is, in the expert’s opinion, the fair value for each share concerned, the expert must:
(a) first, assess the value of the company as a whole, in accordance with the assumptions (if any) notified to the expert by the Minister for the valuation of the company; and
(b) then allocate that value among the classes of shares in the company that either have been issued or that the Insurance Act statutory manager proposes to issue (taking into account the relative financial risk, and voting and distribution rights, of the classes); and
(c) then allocate the value of each class pro rata among the shares in that class that either have been issued or that the Insurance Act statutory manager proposes to issue (without allowing a premium or applying a discount for particular shares in that class).
Assumptions for valuation of company
(4) The Minister may give the expert written notice of assumptions for the valuation of the company. The Minister may, by further written notice given to the expert, revoke, but not vary, notice of the assumptions. A notice under this subsection is not a legislative instrument.
Determining fair value of rights
(5) In determining for the purposes of paragraph (2)(a) the amount that is, in the expert’s opinion, the fair value for each right concerned, the expert must act in accordance with the assumptions (if any) notified to the expert by the Minister for the valuation of the right.
Assumptions for valuation of rights
(6) The Minister may give the expert written notice of assumptions for the valuation of the rights concerned. The Minister may, by further written notice given to the expert, revoke, but not vary, notice of the assumptions. A notice under this subsection is not a legislative instrument.
Contravention does not invalidate act
(7) A contravention of subsection (1), (2), (3), (5) or (9) does not affect the validity of anything done under section 62ZOF.
Exemption from subsection (1)
(8) APRA may determine in writing that subsection (1) does not apply in relation to an act relating to shares or rights if APRA is satisfied that delaying the act to enable compliance with that subsection in relation to the act would detrimentally affect:
(a) policyholders with:
(i) if the company is a general insurer—the general insurer; or
(ii) if the company is not a general insurer—the relevant general insurer mentioned in subsection 62ZOA(3); and
(b) financial system stability in Australia.
(9) APRA must:
(a) publish a copy of a determination under subsection (8) in the Gazette; and
(b) give a copy of a determination under subsection (8) to the Insurance Act statutory manager concerned (unless that manager is APRA).
(10) A determination made under subsection (8) is not a legislative instrument.
62ZOH Act under section 62ZOF not ground for denying obligation
(1) This section applies if a body corporate is party to a contract, whether the proper law of the contract is:
(a) Australian law (including the law of a State or Territory); or
(b) law of a foreign country (including the law of part of a foreign country).
(2) None of the matters mentioned in subsection (3) allows the contract, or a party to the contract (other than the body corporate), to do any of the following:
(a) deny any obligation under the contract;
(b) accelerate any debt under the contract;
(c) close out any transaction relating to the contract;
(d) enforce any security under the contract.
(3) The matters are as follows:
(a) an Insurance Act statutory manager of the body corporate doing an act under subsection 62ZOF(1) relating to the body corporate;
(b) if the body corporate is a member of a relevant group of bodies corporate—an Insurance Act statutory manager of another member of the group doing an act under subsection 62ZOF(1) in relation to that other member.
62ZOI APRA may require a person to give information etc. for the purposes of this Division
APRA may require person to give information etc.
(1) APRA may require a person, by written notice given to the person, to give APRA information, or documents containing information, relating to the business of a body corporate that has an Insurance Act statutory manager if:
(a) in a case where the Insurance Act statutory manager is APRA:
(i) APRA believes, on reasonable grounds, that the person has such information or documents; and
(ii) APRA requires the information or documents for the purposes of this Division; and
(b) in a case where the Insurance Act statutory manager is not APRA:
(i) the Insurance Act statutory manager requests, in writing, that APRA require the person to give the information or documents under this subsection; and
(ii) APRA believes, on reasonable grounds, that the person has such information or documents; and
(iii) APRA is satisfied that the Insurance Act statutory manager requires the information or documents for the purposes of this Division.
(2) The notice:
(a) must specify a period within which the information or documents must be given to APRA; and
(b) may specify the form and manner in which the information or documents must be given to APRA.
(3) The period specified under paragraph (2)(a) must be reasonable in all the circumstances.
Offence
(4) A person commits an offence if:
(a) APRA requires the person to give APRA information or documents under subsection (1); and
(b) the person refuses or fails to give the information or documents as required.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months or 50 penalty units, or both.
Self‑incrimination
(5) A person is not excused from complying with a requirement under subsection (1) to give information or documents on the ground that doing so would tend to incriminate the individual or make the individual liable to a penalty.
(6) However, in the case of an individual:
(a) the information or document given; and
(b) giving the information or document; and
(c) any information, document or thing obtained as a direct or indirect consequence of giving the information or document;
are not admissible in evidence against the individual in a criminal proceeding or a proceeding for the imposition of a penalty, other than a proceeding in respect of the falsity of the information or document.
Section 62ZOD not limited
(7) This section does not limit section 62ZOD.
62ZOJ Administrator in control—additional powers to recommend action by APRA
Types of recommendation
(1) An administrator of a body corporate’s business may make any of the following recommendations to APRA, by instrument in writing given to APRA:
(a) that APRA make a particular direction under subsection 62ZOM(3) or Division 2 of Part IX in respect of the body corporate;
(b) that APRA apply for the body corporate to be wound up;
(c) if the body corporate is a general insurer—that APRA revoke the general insurer’s authorisation under section 12;
(d) if the body corporate is an authorised NOHC—that APRA revoke the authorised NOHC’s authorisation under section 18.
Effect of recommendation
(2) If an administrator of a body corporate’s business makes a recommendation under this section, APRA must consider the recommendation but is not required to act on it.
62ZOK Insurance Act statutory manager’s liabilities and duties
Immunity
(1) An Insurance Act statutory manager, or a person acting on behalf of an Insurance Act statutory manager, is not subject to any liability (whether civil or criminal) in respect of anything done, or omitted to be done, in the exercise or performance, or the purported exercise or performance, of powers, functions or duties conferred or imposed on the Insurance Act statutory manager by or under this Act.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to an act or omission in bad faith.
(3) To avoid doubt, an Insurance Act statutory manager is not liable under section 588G, 588GAB or 588GAC of the Corporations Act 2001 in respect of anything done, or omitted to be done, in the exercise or performance, or the purported exercise or performance, of powers, functions or duties conferred or imposed on the Insurance Act statutory manager by or under this Act. This subsection does not limit the scope of subsection (1).
Signpost to secrecy obligations
(4) Part 6 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998 prohibits certain disclosures of information received by Insurance Act statutory managers under this Act.
A transaction of a body corporate is not voidable under section 588FE of the Corporations Act 2001 merely because:
(a) the transaction was entered into at a time when an Insurance Act statutory manager was in control of the body corporate’s business; and
(b) the transaction is:
(i) an uncommercial transaction (within the meaning of that Act) of the body corporate; or
(ii) an unfair preference (within the meaning of that Act) given by the body corporate to a creditor of the company; or
(iii) an insolvent transaction (within the meaning of that Act) of the body corporate; or
(iv) a creditor‑defeating disposition (within the meaning of that Act) by the body corporate.
62ZOM Administrator in control—additional duties
Duty to report to APRA on request
(1) A person who is an administrator of a body corporate’s business must give to APRA a written report showing how the control of the body corporate’s business is being carried out if APRA requests that such a report be provided to it. The report must be given to APRA within a reasonable time after the request.
Duty to report to APRA on termination of appointment
(2) A person who was an administrator of a body corporate’s business must give to APRA a written report showing how the control of the body corporate’s business was carried out over the period of the administrator’s appointment if the administrator’s appointment has been terminated. The report must be given to APRA within a reasonable time of the termination.
Duty to follow directions by APRA
(3) APRA may give an administrator of a body corporate’s business a direction relating to the control of the body corporate’s business, and may alter such a direction. If a direction (including an altered direction) is given to an administrator by APRA, the administrator must:
(a) act in accordance with the direction; or
(b) immediately provide to APRA information relating to the control of the body corporate’s business and request APRA to alter the direction.
(4) If an administrator of a body corporate’s business requests APRA to alter a direction and APRA considers the request then confirms the direction, the administrator must act in accordance with the direction.
(1) If an administrator of a body corporate’s business has reasonable cause to believe that an action that the administrator proposes to take is an action that is likely to have a detrimental effect on financial system stability in Australia, the administrator must:
(a) notify APRA as soon as practicable; and
(b) obtain APRA’s written consent before taking the action.
(2) The administrator is not required to comply with subsection (1) if the administrator is satisfied that it is not reasonably practicable to do so, having regard to urgency or other similar constraint.
(3) The performance of a function or the exercise of a power by an administrator is not invalid merely because of a failure by the administrator to comply with this section.
62ZOO Termination of Insurance Act statutory manager’s appointment
(1) APRA may terminate the appointment of an administrator of a body corporate’s business and either appoint another person as administrator of the body corporate’s business or itself take control of the body corporate’s business if:
(a) the administrator contravenes a requirement of this Division; or
(b) APRA considers such action necessary to:
(i) facilitate the resolution of the body corporate, a relevant group of bodies corporate of which the body corporate is a member, or another member of such a group; or
(ii) if the body corporate is a general insurer—protect the interests of policyholders of the general insurer; or
(iii) promote financial system stability in Australia.
(2) If:
(a) APRA is the statutory manager of a body corporate; and
(b) the requirement in paragraph (1)(b) is satisfied;
it may cease to be the statutory manager of the body corporate and appoint a person as administrator of the body corporate’s business.
(3) This section has effect subject to section 62ZOC.
(1) The directors of a body corporate cease to hold office when an Insurance Act statutory manager takes control of the body corporate’s business.
Note: For the definition of director, see subsection (10).
(2) A director of a body corporate must not be appointed or elected while an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of the body corporate’s business unless the appointment is made under subsection 62ZOC(2).
(3) The appointment of an agent of a body corporate under section 118 ceases to have effect when an Insurance Act statutory manager takes control of the body corporate’s business.
(4) A person must not be appointed as an agent of a body corporate under section 118 while an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of the body corporate’s business unless the appointment is made under subsection 62ZOC(2).
(5) If a person who ceased to hold office as a director of a body corporate under subsection (1), or a purported director of a body corporate appointed or elected in contravention of subsection (2), purports to act in relation to the body corporate’s business while an Insurance Act statutory manager has control of the body corporate’s business, those acts are invalid and of no effect.
(6) If a person whose appointment as an agent of a body corporate under section 118 ceased to have effect under subsection (3) purports to act in relation to the body corporate’s business while an Insurance Act statutory manager has control of the body corporate’s business, those acts are invalid and of no effect.
(7) Subsections (1), (2) and (5) do not apply in relation to a body corporate that is a foreign general insurer.
(8) Subsection (9) applies if:
(a) subsections (1), (2) and (5) do not apply in relation to a body corporate because of subsection (7); and
(b) an Insurance Act statutory manager takes control of the body corporate’s business; and
(c) a director of the body corporate acts, or purports to act in relation to the body corporate’s business while the Insurance Act statutory manager has control of the body corporate’s business.
(9) Those acts are invalid and of no effect to the extent that they relate to:
(a) the Australian business assets and liabilities of the body corporate; or
(b) the management of the body corporate, to the extent that the management relates to the Australian business assets and liabilities of the body corporate.
(10) For the purposes of this section, director has the same meaning as it has in the Corporations Act 2001.
(1) The appointment of an external administrator of a body corporate is terminated when an Insurance Act statutory manager takes control of the body corporate’s business.
Note: For the definition of external administrator, see subsection 3(1).
(2) An external administrator of a body corporate must not be appointed while an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of the body corporate’s business unless APRA approves the appointment.
(3) If a person who ceased to be the external administrator of a body corporate under subsection (1), or a purported external administrator of the body corporate appointed in contravention of subsection (2), purports to act in relation to the body corporate’s business while an Insurance Act statutory manager has control of the body corporate’s business, those acts are invalid and of no effect.
(4) APRA must inform the external administrator of a body corporate that an Insurance Act statutory manager will take control of the body corporate’s business as soon as possible after the decision that an Insurance Act statutory manager will take control of the body corporate’s business is made. However, failure to inform the external administrator does not affect the operation of this section.
62ZOR Moratorium—effect of Insurance Act statutory management on court and tribunal proceedings
(1) A person cannot begin or continue a proceeding in a court or tribunal covered by subsection (8) in respect of a body corporate if an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of the body corporate’s business.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:
(a) the court or tribunal grants leave for the proceedings to be begun or continued on the ground that the person would be caused hardship if leave were not granted; and
(b) the beginning or continuing of the proceedings is in accordance with such terms (if any) as the court or tribunal imposes.
(3) A person intending to apply for leave of the court or tribunal under paragraph (2)(a) must give APRA at least 10 days notice of the intention to apply (or a shorter period, if the court or tribunal considers that exceptional circumstances make this necessary).
(4) APRA may apply to the court or tribunal to be joined as a party to the proceedings for leave. If APRA is joined as a party, the court or tribunal must have regard to APRA’s views in deciding:
(a) whether to grant leave under paragraph (2)(a); and
(b) if the court or tribunal decides to grant the leave—whether to impose terms as mentioned in paragraph (2)(b); and
(c) if the court or tribunal decides to impose such terms—the nature of those terms.
(5) Subsection (1) also does not apply if:
(a) APRA consents in writing to the proceedings beginning or continuing; or
(b) the Insurance Act statutory manager, after considering APRA’s views, consents to the proceedings beginning or continuing.
(6) APRA (or the Insurance Act statutory manager) cannot revoke a consent given for the purposes of subsection (5).
(7) Neither APRA nor the Insurance Act statutory manager is liable to an action or other proceedings for damages in respect of a refusal to give consent under subsection (5).
(8) A proceeding in a court or tribunal is covered by this subsection in respect of a body corporate if it is any of the following:
(a) a proceeding against the body corporate (including a cross‑claim or third party claim against the body corporate);
(b) a proceeding in relation to property of the body corporate;
(c) a proceeding to enforce any security (including a mortgage or charge) granted by the body corporate, or by a related body corporate of the body corporate, over any property that the body corporate owns, uses, possesses, occupies or in which the body corporate otherwise has an interest.
(9) Subsection (8) does not cover a proceeding in respect of an offence or a contravention of a provision of a law for which a pecuniary penalty (however described) may be imposed.
(10) In this section, a reference to a tribunal includes a reference to the following:
(a) an industrial tribunal;
(b) an arbitral tribunal.
(1) No enforcement process in relation to property of a body corporate can be begun or proceeded with if an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of the body corporate’s business.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:
(a) the Federal Court grants leave for the process to be begun or continued on the ground that the person would be caused hardship if leave were not granted; or
(b) the beginning or continuing of the process is in accordance with such terms (if any) as the Court imposes.
(3) A person intending to apply for leave of the Federal Court under paragraph (2)(a) must give APRA at least 10 days notice of the intention to apply (or a shorter period, if the Court considers that exceptional circumstances make this necessary).
(4) APRA may apply to the Federal Court to be joined as a party to the proceedings for leave. If APRA is joined as a party, the Federal Court must have regard to APRA’s views in deciding:
(a) whether to grant leave under paragraph (2)(a); and
(b) if the Court decides to grant the leave—whether to impose terms as mentioned in paragraph (2)(b); and
(c) if the Court decides to impose such terms—the nature of those terms.
(5) Subsection (1) also does not apply if:
(a) APRA consents to the process beginning or continuing; or
(b) the Insurance Act statutory manager consents to the process beginning or continuing.
(6) APRA (or the Insurance Act statutory manager) cannot revoke a consent given for the purposes of subsection (5).
(7) Neither APRA nor the Insurance Act statutory manager is liable to an action or other proceedings for damages in respect of a refusal to give consent under subsection (5).
62ZOT Moratorium—effect of Insurance Act statutory management on disposal of property
(1) A person must not dispose of property if:
(a) the property is owned by another person; and
(b) the other person is a body corporate; and
(c) an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of the body corporate’s business.
Note: The Federal Court may grant an injunction under section 129D in respect of a contravention of this subsection.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:
(a) APRA consents to the disposal; or
(b) the Insurance Act statutory manager consents to the disposal.
(3) Neither APRA nor the Insurance Act statutory manager is liable to an action or other proceedings for damages in respect of a refusal to give consent under subsection (2).
62ZOU Moratorium—Restrictions on exercise of third party property rights
(1) Section 440B of the Corporations Act 2001 applies during a period in which an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of a body corporate’s business in the same way it applies during the administration of a company.
(2) For the purposes of this section, treat the reference in paragraph 440B(2)(a) of the Corporations Act 2001 to the administrator’s written consent as being a reference to:
(a) the Insurance Act statutory manager’s written consent; or
(b) APRA’s written consent.
(3) Neither APRA nor an Insurance Act statutory manager is liable to an action or other proceedings for damages in respect of a refusal to give consent as mentioned in subsection (2).
(4) This section applies despite sections 62ZOR, 62ZOS and 62ZOT.
62ZOV Moratorium—effect of Insurance Act statutory management on supply of essential services
(1) If:
(a) an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of a body corporate’s business; and
(b) the Insurance Act statutory manager requests, or authorises someone else to request, a person or authority (the supplier) to supply an essential service to the body corporate in Australia; and
(c) the body corporate owes an amount to the supplier in respect of the supply of the essential service before the day on which the Insurance Act statutory manager took control of the body corporate’s business;
the supplier must not:
(d) refuse to comply with the request for the reason only that the amount is owing; or
(e) make it a condition of the supply of the essential service pursuant to the request that the amount is to be paid.
Note: The Federal Court may grant an injunction under section 129D in respect of a contravention of this subsection.
(2) In this section:
essential service has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act 2001.
62ZOW Moratorium—effect of Insurance Act statutory management on annual general meeting
(1) This section applies to a body corporate that is required under section 250N or section 601BR of the Corporations Act 2001 to hold an annual general meeting within a particular period.
(2) Despite section 250N and section 601BR of that Act, if an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of the body corporate’s business at the end of that period, the body corporate need not hold that annual general meeting.
62ZOX Insurance Act statutory manager being in control not grounds for denial of obligations
(1) This section applies if a body corporate is party to a contract, whether the proper law of the contract is:
(a) Australian law (including the law of a State or Territory); or
(b) law of a foreign country (including the law of part of a foreign country).
(2) None of the matters mentioned in subsection (3) allows the contract, or a party to the contract (other than the body corporate), to do any of the following:
(a) deny any obligation under the contract;
(b) accelerate any debt under the contract;
(c) close out any transaction relating to the contract;
(d) enforce any security under the contract.
(3) The matters are as follows:
(a) an Insurance Act statutory manager being in control, or being appointed to take control, of the business of the body corporate;
(b) if the body corporate is a member of a relevant group of bodies corporate—an Insurance Act statutory manager being in control, or being appointed to take control, of the business of another member of the group.
62ZOY Application of other provisions
(1) None of the matters mentioned in subsection (2) affect:
(a) the continued operation of other provisions of this Act in relation to a body corporate; or
(b) the operation of the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 or the Financial Accountability Regime Act 2023 in relation to a body corporate; or
(c) the obligation of a body corporate to comply with those other provisions and those Acts.
(2) The matters are as follows:
(a) the appointment of an Insurance Act statutory manager of the body corporate’s business under this Division;
(b) the fact that an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of the body corporate’s business.
(3) The Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 does not apply to a body corporate that has an Insurance Act statutory manager.
62ZOZ Costs of statutory management
(1) APRA’s costs (including costs in the nature of remuneration and expenses) of being in control of a body corporate’s business, or of having an administrator in control of a body corporate’s business, are payable from the body corporate’s funds and are a debt due to APRA.
(2) Despite anything contained in any law relating to the winding‑up of companies, debts due to APRA by a body corporate under subsection (1) have priority in a winding‑up of the body corporate over all other unsecured debts.
62ZOZA APRA must report to Minister and publish information about statutory management
Reports to the Minister
(1) If the Minister requests APRA to give him or her a written report concerning the activities of Insurance Act statutory managers in respect of specified body corporates or in respect of a specified period, APRA must give the Minister such a written report within a reasonable time after the Minister requests it.
(2) If an Insurance Act statutory manager takes control of a body corporate’s business during a financial year, or if there is an ultimate termination of control during a financial year, APRA must give the Minister a written report within a reasonable time after the end of the financial year concerning activities of all Insurance Act statutory managers and each ultimate termination of control that occurred during that financial year.
Requirement to publish notices in Gazette
(3) If APRA:
(a) takes control of a body corporate’s business; or
(b) appoints an administrator of a body corporate’s business; or
(c) makes an ultimate termination of control in respect of a body corporate’s business;
APRA must publish notice of that fact in the Gazette. However, mere failure to publish such a notice does not affect the validity of the act.
62ZOZB Exceptions to Part IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010
For the purposes of subsection 51(1) of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010, the following things are specified and specifically authorised:
(a) the acquisition of assets in:
(i) a sale or disposal of the whole or part of the business of a body corporate under this Division by an Insurance Act statutory manager in control of the body corporate’s business; or
(ii) a transfer of insurance business of a general insurer under a scheme prepared by an Insurance Act statutory manager in control of the general insurer’s business and confirmed (with or without modifications) by the Federal Court under Division 3A of Part III;
(whether the assets are shares in another body corporate or other assets);
(b) the acquisition of shares in a body corporate as a direct result of:
(i) the issue or sale of the shares under this Division by an Insurance Act statutory manager in control of the body corporate’s business; or
(ii) the exercise of a right to acquire shares that was issued or sold under this Division by an Insurance Act statutory manager in control of the body corporate’s business.
Division 2—Extra provisions relating to external administration of general insurers
62ZP Relationship of this Division with Chapter 5 of, and Schedule 2 to, the Corporations Act 2001
This Division applies in relation to a general insurer in addition to Chapter 5 of, and Schedule 2 to, the Corporations Act 2001.
62ZQ Involving APRA in proposed appointment of external administrators of general insurers and NOHCs
(1) At least one week before a person other than APRA:
(a) makes an application to a court under Chapter 5 of the Corporations Act 2001 for the appointment of an external administrator of a general insurer or of an authorised NOHC of a general insurer; or
(b) makes another kind of application (whether or not to a court) for the appointment of an external administrator of a general insurer or of an authorised NOHC of a general insurer; or
(c) appoints an external administrator of a general insurer or of an authorised NOHC of a general insurer (otherwise than as the result of an application made by another person);
the person must give APRA written notice that the person proposes to make the application or appointment.
(2) If there is an approved form for the notice, the person must give the notice in the approved form.
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply if APRA gives the person written notice, before the person makes the application or appointment, that APRA consents to the person making the application or appointment.
(4) APRA is entitled to be heard on the application.
(5) After receiving the notice, APRA may request the person to provide details of the proposed application.
Offence
(6) A person (other than APRA) commits an offence if:
(a) the person:
(i) makes an application to a court under Chapter 5 of the Corporations Act 2001 for the appointment of an external administrator of a general insurer or of an authorised NOHC of a general insurer; or
(ii) makes another kind of application (whether or not to a court) for the appointment of an external administrator of a general insurer or of an authorised NOHC of a general insurer; or
(iii) appoints an external administrator of a general insurer or of an authorised NOHC of a general insurer (otherwise than as the result of an application made by another person); and
(b) APRA did not give the person written notice, before the person made the application or appointment, of APRA’s consent to the person making the application or appointment, in accordance with subsection (3); and
(c) at least one week before making the application or appointment:
(i) if there is an approved form for the purposes of this paragraph—the person did not give APRA notice in the approved form indicating that the person proposed to make the application or appointment; or
(ii) otherwise—the person did not give APRA written notice indicating that the person proposed to make the application or appointment.
Penalty: 60 penalty units.
(7) An offence against subsection (6) is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
62ZR Involving APRA in applications by liquidator
(1) Before making an application to a court in relation to a matter arising under the winding‑up of an entity covered by subsection (4), or the proposed winding‑up of an entity covered by subsection (4), a liquidator must give APRA written notice that the liquidator proposes to make the application.
(2) The notice must include details of the proposed application.
(3) APRA is entitled to be heard on the application.
(4) This subsection covers the following entities:
(a) a general insurer;
(b) an authorised NOHC;
(c) a subsidiary of a general insurer or authorised NOHC.
62ZS Application by APRA for directions
(1) APRA may apply to the Federal Court for directions regarding any matter arising under:
(a) the winding‑up of an entity covered by subsection 62ZR(4) (whether the winding‑up occurs as a result of an application made under the Corporations Act 2001 or by APRA under Division 3 of this Part); or
(b) the proposed winding‑up of an entity covered by subsection 62ZR(4) (whether the winding‑up will occur as a result of an application made, or proposed to be made, under the Corporations Act 2001 or by APRA under Division 3 of this Part).
(2) APRA must give the liquidator written notice that APRA proposes to make the application.
(3) The notice must include details of the proposed application.
(4) The liquidator is entitled to be heard on the application.
62ZT APRA may request information from liquidator
(1) APRA may request a liquidator of an entity covered by subsection 62ZR(4) in writing to give APRA, within a reasonable time specified in the request, specified information in writing about:
(a) the winding‑up of the entity (whether the winding‑up occurs as a result of an application made under the Corporations Act 2001 or by APRA under Division 3 of this Part) and the other affairs of the general insurer; or
(b) the proposed winding‑up of the entity (whether the winding‑up will occur as a result of an application made, or proposed to be made, under the Corporations Act 2001 or by APRA under Division 3 of this Part) and the other affairs of the general insurer.
(2) The liquidator must comply with the request.
Note: Action may be taken under the Corporations Act 2001 against a liquidator who does not comply with such a request.
Division 3—Extra provisions for winding up general insurers
62ZU Order to wind up general insurer on APRA’s application
(1) After an investigation of a general insurer has been made under Part V, APRA may apply to the Federal Court for an order that the general insurer be wound up.
(2) The Federal Court may make the order if satisfied that it is in the interests of the general insurer’s policyholders.
(3) To avoid doubt, subsection (1) applies whether or not an Insurance Act statutory manager is in control of:
(a) unless paragraph (b) applies—the general insurer’s business; or
(b) if the general insurer is a foreign general insurer—the Australian business assets and liabilities of the foreign general insurer.
62ZV Relationship with the Corporations Act 2001
Section 62ZU applies in relation to a general insurer in addition to Chapter 5 of the Corporations Act 2001.
Note: APRA may choose to apply under section 62ZU for an order that a general insurer be wound up. Alternatively, APRA may choose to apply under the Corporations Act 2001 for an order that the general insurer be wound up (for example, under section 459P or 462 of that Act).
Division 4—Special provisions relating to foreign general insurers
62ZVA Limited application of Divisions 1, 1A and 2 to foreign general insurers
(1) Divisions 1, 1A and 2 do not apply in relation to:
(a) business of a foreign general insurer (other than Australian business assets and liabilities); or
(b) the management of a foreign general insurer, to the extent that the management relates to such business of the foreign general insurer.
(2) Subsection 62T(3) does not apply to the issue of policies by a foreign general insurer in the course of insurance business carried on outside Australia by the foreign general insurer.
(3) In this section:
asset has the same meaning as in the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999.
Australian business assets and liabilities, of a foreign general insurer, means the following:
(a) the assets and liabilities of the foreign general insurer in Australia;
(b) any other assets and liabilities of the foreign general insurer that:
(i) are related to its operations in Australia; and
(ii) if regulations are made for the purposes of this subparagraph—are of a kind specified in those regulations.
liability has the same meaning as in the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999.
Part VC—Financial claims scheme for policyholders with insolvent general insurers
The main purpose of this Part is to provide for a scheme that:
(a) allows the Minister to make a declaration about a general insurer:
(i) that is under judicial management and APRA believes is insolvent; or
(ia) that is under statutory management under Division 1A of Part VB; or
(ii) for which an external administrator has been appointed under Chapter 5 of the Corporations Act 2001 and APRA believes is insolvent; and
(b) entitles certain persons, who have valid claims connected with certain protected policies issued by a declared general insurer, to be paid certain amounts before they would receive payment in a winding up of the general insurer; and
(c) substitutes APRA for those persons as a creditor of the declared general insurer to the extent of the entitlements; and
(d) allows APRA to facilitate a transfer of business from the declared general insurer to a receiving body under the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999 by entitling the receiving body to amounts in respect of the protected policies.
62ZX APRA’s functions relating to this Part
APRA’s functions include:
(a) meeting entitlements under Division 3; and
(b) preparing, and assisting the Minister to prepare, for the application of that Division in relation to general insurers; and
(c) meeting APRA’s other obligations under this Part and the regulations made for the purposes of this Part.
62ZY Determination that policies are not protected policies
APRA may determine in writing that a policy is not a protected policy if it is reasonable to conclude, from the nature of the policy and/or the circumstances in which it was issued, that the policy was issued primarily to make the policyholder entitled to a payment under this Part.
62ZZ Determination that persons do not have entitlements
The Minister may, by legislative instrument, determine that persons in a specified class do not have entitlements under this Part.
62ZZA Allowing extra time for claims
(1) Before, on or after the day prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of subparagraph 62ZZF(1)(b)(ii) or 62ZZG(1)(aa)(ii), APRA may specify in writing a later day as the day on which the period for making one or more claims that may give rise to an entitlement under this Part ends.
(2) An instrument made under subsection (1) that specifies a day in relation to a single claim identified in the instrument is not a legislative instrument.
(3) Otherwise, an instrument made under subsection (1) is a legislative instrument.
(4) As soon as practicable after making an instrument described in subsection (2), APRA must take the steps it considers reasonable to inform a person whom it believes could make the claim concerned of the day specified in the instrument.
Division 2—Declaration of general insurer
62ZZC Declaration that Division 3 applies in relation to general insurer
(1) The Minister may declare that Division 3 applies in relation to a specified general insurer if:
(a) any of the following requirements are satisfied:
(i) the general insurer is under judicial management under Division 1 of Part VB;
(ii) the general insurer is under statutory management under Division 1A of Part VB;
(iii) an external administrator for the general insurer has been appointed under Chapter 5 of the Corporations Act 2001; and
(b) APRA has advised the Minister under this Division that APRA believes that:
(i) the general insurer is insolvent as defined in section 95A of the Corporations Act 2001; or
(ii) the general insurer is a foreign general insurer and is unable to pay, from its assets in Australia (other than any assets or amount excluded by the prudential standards for the purposes of paragraph 28(b)), all its debts that are liabilities in Australia other than pre‑authorisation liabilities, as and when those debts become due and payable.
Note 1: Section 116A deals with assets and liabilities in Australia.
Note 2: The declaration does not end the judicial management or statutory management of the general insurer.
Declaration to specify amount for meeting entitlements
(2) The declaration must also specify the amount (if any) that is to be credited to the Financial Claims Scheme Special Account in connection with the application of Division 3 in relation to the declared general insurer. The amount must not be more than $20,000,000,000.
Declaration to specify amount for administration
(3) The declaration must also specify the amount (if any) that is to be credited to the APRA Special Account in connection with the administration of this Part in relation to the declared general insurer. The amount must not be more than $100,000,000.
Amendment of specification of amounts
(4) The Minister may amend a declaration made under subsection (1), but only to change the specification of an amount under subsection (2) or (3), within the limit set in that subsection.
Declaration cannot be revoked
(5) The Minister cannot revoke a declaration made under subsection (1).
Declaration or amendment not disallowable
(6) A declaration made under subsection (1), or an amendment of the declaration, is a legislative instrument, but section 42 (disallowance) of the Legislation Act 2003 does not apply to the declaration or amendment.
Note: Part 4 of Chapter 3 (sunsetting) of the Legislation Act 2003 does not apply to the declaration or amendment: see regulations made for the purposes of paragraph 54(2)(b) of that Act.
Effect of declaration or amendment
(7) The declaration or amendment:
(a) commences from the time it is made, despite subsection 12(1) of the Legislation Act 2003; and
(b) has effect according to its terms.
(7A) Subsection 12(2) (retrospective application of legislative instruments) of the Legislation Act 2003 does not apply to the declaration or amendment.
Declaration not to specify general insurer by reference to class
(8) Subsection 13(3) of the Legislation Act 2003 does not apply to a declaration under subsection (1) specifying a general insurer.
Note: This ensures that a declaration must specify a general insurer individually, and cannot specify it by reference to a class of general insurers.
62ZZD Advice and information for decision on making declaration
(1) The Minister may give APRA, ASIC or the Reserve Bank of Australia a written request for advice or information about a matter relevant to making a decision about making a declaration under section 62ZZC (including a matter relating to the affairs of a general insurer).
(2) As soon as reasonably practicable after being given the request, APRA, ASIC or the Reserve Bank of Australia must give the Minister the advice or information about the matter.
(3) In making the decision, the Minister must take into account the advice and information that he or she has been given before making the decision. This does not limit what the Minister may take into account in making the decision.
62ZZE APRA may advise Minister of its belief of insolvency
(1) This section applies if APRA believes that a particular general insurer:
(a) is insolvent as defined in section 95A of the Corporations Act 2001; or
(b) is a foreign general insurer and is unable to pay, from its assets in Australia (other than any assets or amount excluded by the prudential standards for the purposes of paragraph 28(b)), all its debts that are liabilities in Australia other than pre‑authorisation liabilities, as and when those debts become due and payable.
Note: Section 116A deals with assets and liabilities in Australia.
(2) APRA may give the Minister written advice of APRA’s belief.
Division 3—Early payment of claims
62ZZF Entitlement to payment of claimant under protected policy
Who this section covers
(1) This section applies to a person if:
(a) the person is entitled to claim under insurance cover provided under a protected policy:
(i) that a general insurer issued before becoming a declared general insurer; or
(ii) in respect of which liability was accepted by a general insurer before becoming a declared general insurer;
whether the entitlement to claim arises because the cover is provided to the person under the policy or because the person is otherwise entitled to claim under the cover; and
(b) the person makes a claim under that cover, in the approved form (if any), within the period:
(i) starting on the day prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this subparagraph; and
(ii) ending on a day prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this subparagraph or, if APRA specifies a later day, that later day; and
(c) APRA determines under section 62ZZI that the insurer is liable to the person in respect of the claim; and
(d) the person is not covered by a determination under section 62ZZ.
Claims worth less than $5,000
(2) The person is entitled to be paid by APRA an amount equal to the insurer’s liability to the person in respect of the claim if APRA determines that the amount of the liability is less than $5,000.
Note: Section 62ZZI requires APRA to determine not only whether the insurer has a liability in respect of the claim but also the amount of the liability.
Claims worth $5,000 or more
(3) The person is entitled to be paid by APRA an amount equal to the insurer’s liability to the person in respect of the claim if APRA determines that:
(a) the amount of the liability is $5,000 or more; and
(b) the person meets the conditions prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.
Note 1: Section 62ZZI requires APRA to determine not only whether the insurer has a liability in respect of the claim but also the amount of the liability.
Note 2: Section 62ZZJ requires APRA to determine whether the person meets the prescribed conditions, if the person applies for the determination.
Different claim periods for different claims
(4) To avoid doubt, regulations for the purposes of subparagraph (1)(b)(i) or (ii) may prescribe different days for the purposes of that subparagraph applying in relation to different claims or claims under different cover.
62ZZFA Interim claims and payments for section 62ZZF entitlements
(1) This section applies if:
(a) a person makes a claim under insurance cover provided under a protected policy, in the approved form (if any), within the period mentioned in paragraph 62ZZF(1)(b); and
(b) the person is not covered by a determination under section 62ZZ; and
(c) APRA becomes aware that the person has made an interim claim for payment of part or parts of the person’s entitlement under section 62ZZF (whether or not the person has made a previous interim claim for such a payment); and
(d) APRA determines, under subsection (2), the amount of the interim claim mentioned in paragraph (c) that ought to be recognised as valid; and
(e) if the regulations prescribe conditions for the purposes of this paragraph—those conditions are met.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(d), APRA may determine, in writing, the amount of the interim claim mentioned in subsection (1)(c), to the extent that it ought to be recognised as valid.
(3) If the regulations prescribe conditions according to which APRA can make a determination under subsection (2), APRA can only make such a determination in accordance with those conditions.
(4) The person is entitled to be paid by APRA an amount equal to:
(a) unless paragraph (b) applies—the amount mentioned in paragraph (1)(d); or
(b) if the regulations prescribe limits, or methods for determining limits, for entitlements under this subsection—the lesser of:
(i) the amount mentioned in paragraph (1)(d); or
(ii) the applicable limit specified in or worked out in accordance with the regulations.
(5) If the person is entitled under subsection 62ZZF(2) or (3) to be paid an amount by APRA in respect of the claim mentioned in paragraph (1)(a), the person’s entitlement under subsection (4) to be paid an amount discharges, to the extent of that amount, the person’s entitlement under subsection 62ZZF(2) or (3).
62ZZG Entitlement to payment of third party
Who this section covers
(1) This section applies to a person if:
(a) the person may recover an amount (the recoverable amount) in accordance with a determination made by APRA under subsection 62ZZJ(4); and
(aa) the person makes a claim in relation to the recoverable amount, in the approved form (if any), within the period:
(i) starting on the day prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this subparagraph; and
(ii) ending on a day prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this subparagraph or, if APRA specifies a later day, that later day; and
(b) the person is not covered by a determination under section 62ZZ.
Recoverable amounts less than $5,000
(2) The person is entitled to be paid by APRA an amount equal to the recoverable amount if APRA determines that the recoverable amount is less than $5,000.
Note: Section 62ZZJ requires APRA to determine not only whether it is satisfied the person could recover under various provisions but also the amount the person could recover.
Recoverable amounts of $5,000 or more
(3) The person is entitled to be paid by APRA an amount equal to the recoverable amount if APRA determines that:
(a) the recoverable amount is $5,000 or more; and
(b) the person meets the conditions prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.
Note 1: Section 62ZZJ requires APRA to determine not only whether it is satisfied the person could recover under various provisions but also the amount the person could recover.
Note 2: Section 62ZZJ requires APRA to determine whether the person meets the prescribed conditions, if the person applies for the determination.
62ZZGA Interim claims and payments for section 62ZZG entitlements
(1) This section applies if:
(a) a person makes a claim under insurance cover provided under a protected policy, in the approved form (if any), within the period mentioned in paragraph 62ZZG(1)(aa); and
(b) the person is not covered by a determination under section 62ZZ; and
(c) APRA becomes aware that the person has made an interim claim for payment of part or parts of the person’s entitlement under section 62ZZG (whether or not the person has made a previous interim claim for such a payment); and
(d) APRA determines, under subsection (2), the amount of the interim claim mentioned in paragraph (c) that ought to be recognised as valid; and
(e) if the regulations prescribe conditions for the purposes of this paragraph—those conditions are met.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(d), APRA may determine, in writing, the amount of the interim claim mentioned in subsection (1)(c), to the extent that it ought to be recognised as valid.
(3) If the regulations prescribe conditions according to which APRA can make a determination under subsection (2), APRA can only make such a determination in accordance with those conditions.
(4) The person is entitled to be paid by APRA an amount equal to:
(a) unless paragraph (b) applies—the amount mentioned in paragraph (1)(d); or
(b) if the regulations prescribe limits, or methods for determining limits, for entitlements under this subsection—the lesser of:
(i) the amount mentioned in paragraph (1)(d); or
(ii) the applicable limit specified in or worked out in accordance with the regulations.
(5) If the person is entitled under subsection 62ZZG(2) or (3) to be paid an amount by APRA in respect of the claim mentioned in paragraph (1)(a), the person’s entitlement under subsection (4) to be paid an amount discharges, to the extent of that amount, the person’s entitlement under subsection 62ZZG(2) or (3).
62ZZH Entitlement on basis of notionally extended cover
(1) If the period of insurance cover provided under a protected policy issued by a general insurer, or in respect of which liability has been accepted by a general insurer, includes the time when the insurer becomes a declared general insurer, sections 62ZZF, 62ZZFA, 62ZZG, 62ZZGA, 62ZZI and 62ZZJ apply as if the period of the cover extended for 28 days after that time, even if:
(a) the policy is cancelled within those 28 days; or
(b) the period of the cover would otherwise have ended before the end of those 28 days.
Note: The effects of applying sections 62ZZF, 62ZZFA, 62ZZG and 62ZZGA as if the period of cover were extended include those sections applying as if:
(a) the entitlement to claim under that cover were correspondingly extended; and
(b) the liability of the insurer were also extended in respect of such claims.
(2) However, if the policyholder cancelled the policy within those 28 days, those sections apply as if the period of the cover extended only until the cancellation of the policy.
62ZZI APRA must determine insurer’s liability in respect of claim
(1) If APRA becomes aware that a person has, in the period described in paragraph 62ZZF(1)(b), made a claim under insurance cover provided under a protected policy of a kind referred to in paragraph 62ZZF(1)(a), APRA must determine in accordance with the policy:
(a) whether the insurer is liable to the person in respect of the claim; and
(b) the amount of that liability (if any).
(1A) Without limiting subsection (1), the amount of the liability (if any) determined under subsection (1) may be an amount agreed to by APRA and the person.
(2) The determination must be made in writing as soon as reasonably practicable after APRA becomes aware that the claim has been made.
62ZZJ Determinations APRA must make on application
Determination that person meets conditions prescribed
(1) Subsection (2) has effect if a person applies to APRA, in the approved form (if any), for a determination that the person meets the conditions prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of paragraph 62ZZF(3)(b) or 62ZZG(3)(b).
(2) APRA must determine in writing, as soon as reasonably practicable after the application is made, whether the person meets the conditions.
Determination that person may recover amount from insurer
(3) Subsection (4) has effect if a person applies to APRA, in the approved form (if any), for a determination that APRA is satisfied that any provision mentioned in subsection (4B) permits the person to recover an amount from a general insurer because of insurance cover the insurer provided under a protected policy:
(a) that the insurer issued before becoming a declared general insurer; or
(b) in respect of which liability was accepted by the insurer before becoming a declared general insurer.
(4) APRA must determine in writing, as soon as reasonably practicable after the application is made:
(a) whether APRA is satisfied that any provision mentioned in subsection (4B) permits the person to recover an amount from the general insurer because of the insurance cover; and
(b) what that amount (if any) is.
(4A) Without limiting subsection (4), the amount (if any) determined under subsection (4) may be an amount agreed to by APRA and the person.
(4B) The provisions are as follows:
(a) section 51 of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984;
(b) section 601AG of the Corporations Act 2001;
(c) any provision of any law specified in the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.
Giving applicant notice of determination
(5) As soon as reasonably practicable after making a determination under subsection (2) or (4), APRA must give the applicant a copy of the determination.
(1) A person’s entitlement under this Division to be paid an amount may be met:
(a) by paying the amount to the person as a single amount or in instalments determined by APRA; or
(b) by applying the amount, as a single amount or in instalments determined by APRA, for the person’s benefit; or
(c) by paying part of the amount to the person and applying the rest of the amount for the person’s benefit.
(1A) For the purposes of this section, treat the application of an amount, or part of an amount, in satisfaction of a liability of the person as being an application of the amount, or the part of the amount, for the person’s benefit.
(2) The regulations may make provision for or in relation to the ways in which persons’ entitlements under this Division to be paid amounts may be met.
62ZZKA Giving information about payments in a financial year
(1) This section applies if one or more amounts are paid to, or applied for the benefit of, one or more persons (the recipients) in a financial year to meet (wholly or partly) the recipients’ entitlements under this Division.
Giving each recipient an annual statement
(2) Within 14 days after the end of the financial year, APRA must give each of the recipients a statement about the amounts paid to, or applied for the benefit of, the recipient in the financial year. The statement must:
(a) be in the approved form; and
(b) name the recipient; and
(c) state the recipient’s tax file number, if APRA knows it; and
(d) state the total of the amounts and the total of the amounts (if any) withheld from them under the Taxation Administration Act 1953; and
(e) specify the financial year to which the statement relates.
Provisions about statements and reports in approved forms
(4) Division 388 in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 applies as if this section were a taxation law for the purposes of that Act.
Note: That Division sets out rules about approved forms and when they can be given.
This section does not limit the Taxation Administration Act 1953
(5) Subsection (4) does not limit the operation of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 in relation to APRA.
62ZZL Substitution of APRA as insurer’s creditor
(1) When a person’s entitlement arises under this Division, the rights the person had against the general insurer in relation to the protected policy cease to be rights of the person and become rights of APRA, by force of this subsection.
Note 1: A person’s entitlement arises under this Division when all of the relevant conditions in section 62ZZF or 62ZZG are met. This will generally happen at the last time APRA makes a relevant determination under section 62ZZI or 62ZZJ.
Note 2: APRA’s right against the general insurer has the same priority in the winding up of the general insurer as it would have had if it had continued to be a right of the person.
(2) APRA may exercise or assign a right it has under subsection (1).
Note: Under section 11 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998, APRA’s property is generally held on behalf of the Commonwealth.
62ZZM Meeting of entitlement taken to be payment by insurer
(1) When an amount of a person’s entitlement under this Division connected with a general insurer and a protected policy is met, the person is taken to have been paid the amount by the general insurer under the terms and conditions of the policy.
(1A) To avoid doubt, for the purposes of subsection 562(1) of the Corporations Act 2001, the amount taken to have been paid by the general insurer to the person under subsection (1) is taken to have been received by the person from the general insurer.
(2) However, the regulations may prescribe a purpose for which a person is taken not to have been paid an amount, under the terms and conditions of a policy, by:
(a) a general insurer; or
(b) a class of general insurers; or
(c) all general insurers.
(3) To avoid doubt, subsection (1) does not affect the rights APRA has under section 62ZZL against the general insurer.
62ZZMA APRA may make transferred liabilities determination where transfer of business
(1) APRA may make a determination (a transferred liabilities determination) if:
(a) a general insurer is a declared general insurer as a result of the Minister having made a declaration under section 62ZZC; and
(b) APRA has made, or proposes to make, a determination under section 25 of the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999 (compulsory transfer determination) that there is to be a total transfer or partial transfer of business from the declared general insurer to a receiving body (within the meaning of that Act); and
(c) the transfer of business will transfer the liabilities of the declared general insurer in respect of one or more protected policies issued by the declared general insurer; and
(d) APRA is satisfied that it will be able to identify each of those protected policies; and
(e) APRA has worked out:
(i) APRA’s reasonable estimate of the total amount (the FCS amount) to which policyholders of those protected policies will be entitled (disregarding the determination) under sections 62ZZF and 62ZZG as a result of the Minister’s declaration mentioned in paragraph (a); and
(ii) APRA’s reasonable estimate of the total amount (the administration amount) of the costs that would be incurred by APRA in relation to the exercise of its powers and the performance of its functions under this Part relating to the declared general insurer if it did not make the determination; and
(f) APRA has worked out a total payment amount in accordance with section 62ZZMB; and
(g) APRA considers that it is reasonable in the circumstances to make the determination.
(2) However, APRA cannot make the determination if APRA has already issued a certificate of transfer under section 33 of the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999 stating that the transfer is to take effect.
(3) The determination must be in writing.
(4) The determination must specify the following:
(a) the declared general insurer;
(b) the receiving body;
(c) a description, in general or detailed terms, of all the protected policies of the declared general insurer;
(d) the FCS amount;
(e) the administration amount;
(f) the total payment amount;
(g) the FCS payment amount;
(h) the administration payment amount;
(i) any other information that APRA considers appropriate.
(5) A determination under subsection (1) may be varied, but not revoked, in accordance with subsection 33(3) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
(6) A determination made under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.
62ZZMB Payment amounts under transferred liabilities determination
(1) For the purposes of paragraph 62ZZMA(1)(f), APRA may work out:
(a) an amount (the FCS payment amount) that:
(i) is equal to or less than the FCS amount; and
(ii) APRA considers to be appropriate; and
(b) an amount (the administration payment amount) that:
(i) is equal to or less than the administration amount; and
(ii) APRA considers to be appropriate; and
(c) the amount (the total payment amount) that is the sum of the FCS payment amount and the administration payment amount.
(2) In working out the FCS payment amount and the administration payment amount, APRA must have regard to the following:
(a) the total value of the assets that will be transferred to the receiving body in accordance with the transfer of business;
(b) the total value of the liabilities that will be transferred from the declared general insurer to the receiving body in accordance with the transfer of business;
(c) any other matter that APRA considers appropriate.
(3) The FCS payment amount or the administration payment amount may be a nil amount.
62ZZMC Consequences of transferred liabilities determination once certificate of transfer issued
Application of section
(1) This section applies if:
(a) APRA has made a transferred liabilities determination; and
(b) APRA has issued a certificate of transfer under section 33 of the Financial Sector (Transfer and Restructure) Act 1999 stating that the transfer is to take effect.
Receiving body entitled to total payment amount
(2) The receiving body is entitled to be paid by APRA an amount equal to the total payment amount specified in the determination.
Reduction of rights and entitlements of policyholder
(3) A policyholder’s entitlement under this Division to be paid an amount in respect of a protected policy with the declared general insurer is reduced to nil, if the transfer of business will transfer the liability of the declared general insurer in respect of that protected policy.
Declared general insurer liable to APRA for total payment amount
(4) The declared general insurer is liable to pay to APRA an amount equal to the sum of the total payment amount specified in the determination.
(5) That liability is due and payable to APRA when the certificate of transfer comes into force.
(6) Despite subsection 62ZZL(1), APRA does not have the rights mentioned in that subsection.
To avoid doubt, sections 62ZZK, 62ZZKA, 62ZZL and 62ZZM do not apply in relation to an entitlement under subsection 62ZZMC(2).
62ZZN APRA to try to ensure awareness of making of claims
APRA must take all reasonable steps to ensure that it is made aware, as soon as practicable, of:
(a) the making of a claim described in section 62ZZI within the period described in paragraph 62ZZF(1)(b); and
(b) the time of the making of the claim.
Note: APRA might meet this requirement by requiring under section 62ZZP the general insurer concerned, or the liquidator of the general insurer, to inform APRA of the making of such a claim.
APRA may, by written notice given to any of the following persons, require the person to give APRA such reasonable assistance in the performance of its functions, and the exercise of its powers, under this Part as is specified:
(a) a general insurer (whether or not it is a declared general insurer);
(b) a liquidator appointed in connection with the winding up, or proposed winding up, of a general insurer;
(c) a judicial manager of a general insurer;
(d) an administrator appointed under subsection 62ZOA(1) to take control of a general insurer’s business.
Note: APRA may amend or vary the requirement in writing: see subsection 33(3) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
62ZZP Obtaining information relevant to determining and paying entitlements
(1) APRA may, by written notice given to:
(a) a general insurer (whether or not it is a declared general insurer); or
(b) a liquidator appointed in connection with the winding up, or proposed winding up, of a general insurer; or
(c) a judicial manager of a general insurer; or
(d) an administrator appointed under subsection 62ZOA(1) to take control of a general insurer’s business; or
(e) any other person;
require the general insurer, liquidator, judicial manager, administrator or other person to give a specified person specified information relevant to one or more of the actions described in subsection (4) in a specified way within a reasonable specified time for the person to use in taking one or more of those actions.
(2) The person specified in the requirement must be one of the following:
(a) APRA;
(b) an APRA member whose duties relate to an action described in subsection (4);
(c) an APRA staff member whose duties relate to an action described in subsection (4);
(d) a person to whom APRA has delegated a power or function under this Part that relates to an action described in subsection (4);
(e) a person who is an officer or employee of a person described in paragraph (d) and whose duties relate to an action described in subsection (4).
(3) The information specified in the requirement may be or include personal information. This does not limit the information that may be specified in the requirement.
(4) The actions are as follows:
(a) identifying a person who may have an entitlement under Division 3;
(b) determining whether a person has an entitlement under Division 3 (including making a determination under one or both of sections 62ZZI and 62ZZJ);
(c) determining the amount of an entitlement under Division 3;
(d) meeting an entitlement under Division 3;
(da) preparing or giving a statement required by section 62ZZKA;
(db) complying with an obligation under a law relating to taxation;
(e) assessing whether and how information could be provided by a general insurer (or a liquidator of the general insurer, if one is appointed) to enable the actions described in paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (da), (db) and (d) to be taken if the general insurer were to become a declared general insurer.
62ZZQ Enforcing requirement to give information
Requirement made of general insurer—civil penalty
(1) A general insurer must comply with a requirement made of it under section 62ZZO or subsection 62ZZP(1).
Civil penalty: 10,000 penalty units.
Requirement made of general insurer—offence
(2) A general insurer commits an offence if:
(a) it does, or fails to do, an act; and
(b) the doing of the act, or the failure to do the act, results in a contravention of a requirement made of the general insurer under section 62ZZO or subsection 62ZZP(1).
Penalty: 200 penalty units.
(3) An offence against subsection (2) is an indictable offence.
Note: Section 4K (Continuing and multiple offences) of the Crimes Act 1914 applies to an offence against subsection (2), so a general insurer commits an offence for each day it does not comply with a requirement under subsection 62ZZP(1) (to give information within a particular time).
Requirement made of general insurer—offence by officer
(4) An officer (as defined in section 9 of the Corporations Act 2001) of a general insurer commits an offence if:
(a) the officer fails to take reasonable steps to ensure that the general insurer complies with a requirement made of it under section 62ZZO or subsection 62ZZP(1); and
(b) the officer’s duties include ensuring that the general insurer complies with the requirement.
Penalty: 50 penalty units.
(5) Subsection (4) does not apply to an officer who is a liquidator of the general insurer.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in subsection (5): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code.
(6) If an officer of a general insurer fails to take reasonable steps to ensure that the general insurer complies with a requirement made of it under subsection 62ZZP(1) in circumstances that give rise to the officer committing an offence against subsection (4) of this section, the officer commits an offence against that subsection in respect of:
(a) the first day on which the offence is committed; and
(b) each subsequent day (if any) on which the circumstances that gave rise to the officer committing the offence continue (including the day of conviction for any such offence or any later day).
Note: This subsection does not affect the application of section 4K of the Crimes Act 1914 to other offences against this Act (including subsection (2)) or the regulations.
Liquidator to comply with requirement made of liquidator
(7) A liquidator must comply with a requirement made of the liquidator under section 62ZZO or subsection 62ZZP(1).
Note: Action may be taken under the Corporations Act 2001 against a liquidator who does not comply with such a requirement.
Requirement made of judicial manager of general insurer—civil penalty
(8) A judicial manager of a general insurer must comply with a requirement made of the judicial manager under section 62ZZO or subsection 62ZZP(1).
Civil penalty: 200 penalty units.
Requirement made of judicial manager of general insurer—offence
(9) A judicial manager of a general insurer commits an offence if:
(a) the judicial manager does, or refuses or fails to do, an act; and
(b) the doing of the act, or the failure to do the act, results in a contravention of a requirement made under section 62ZZO or subsection 62ZZP(1).
Penalty: 100 penalty units.
(10) An offence against subsection (9) is an indictable offence.
Note: Section 4K (Continuing and multiple offences) of the Crimes Act 1914 applies to an offence against subsection (9), so the judicial manager commits an offence for each day that the judicial manager does not comply with a requirement under subsection 62ZZP(1).
Requirement made of other person—civil penalty
(11) A person mentioned in paragraph 62ZZP(1)(e) must comply with a requirement made of the person under subsection 62ZZP(1).
Civil penalty: 200 penalty units.
62ZZR Obtaining further information from claimant or applicant
(1) If section 62ZZI or 62ZZJ requires a determination to be made because of the making of a claim or application but there is insufficient information to make the determination:
(a) APRA may request the claimant or applicant to give a specified person, in a specified way within a reasonable specified time, specified information relevant to the making of the determination, for the person to use in making the determination; and
(b) the determination need not be made until after the information is given as requested.
(2) The person specified in the request must be one of the following:
(a) APRA;
(b) an APRA member whose duties relate to the making of the determination;
(c) an APRA staff member whose duties relate to the making of the determination;
(d) a person to whom APRA has delegated the function of making the determination;
(e) a person who is an officer or employee of a person described in paragraph (d) and whose duties relate to the function of making the determination.
(3) The information specified in the request may be or include personal information. This does not limit the information that may be specified in the request.
62ZZS Recovery of overpayments
The regulations may make provision for and in relation to the recovery by APRA of the excess of an amount paid to, or applied for the benefit of, a person purportedly to meet an entitlement of the person under Division 3 over the person’s entitlement (if any) under that Division.
62ZZT APRA may delegate functions and powers under this Part
(1) APRA may, by writing under its seal, delegate any or all of APRA’s functions and powers under this Part to a person.
(2) In performing or exercising functions or powers delegated under subsection (1), the delegate must comply with any directions given by APRA.
(3) This section does not limit section 15 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998.
Note: Section 15 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998:
(a) makes the agreement of the Chair of ASIC a condition for a delegation to an ASIC member or an ASIC staff member; and
(b) makes the agreement of the Governor of the Reserve Bank a condition for a delegation to the Governor or Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank or to an officer of the Reserve Bank Service.
62ZZU APRA’s costs of administration
(1) The costs incurred by APRA in relation to the exercise of its powers and the performance of its functions under this Part relating to a declared general insurer are a debt due by the declared general insurer to APRA.
(2) The debt is admissible to proof against the declared general insurer in the winding up of the general insurer.
(3) The debt has the same priority in the winding up of the declared general insurer as a claim in respect of a policy issued by the insurer.
(4) Subsection (1) does not apply to the amounts of entitlements under Division 3.
Note: APRA may be able to recover those amounts through the rights it acquires under section 62ZZL from the person.
Division 5—Exceptions to Part IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010
62ZZV Exceptions to Part IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010
For the purposes of subsection 51(1) of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010, the following things are specified and specifically authorised:
(a) anything done in the exercise of powers, or performance of functions, under this Part, or regulations made for the purposes of this Part;
(b) anything done to enable or facilitate the exercise of those powers or performance of those functions;
(c) anything incidental to the exercise of those powers or performance of those functions.
63 Review of certain decisions
(1) In this section:
decision has the same meaning as in the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024.
decision maker, in relation to a reviewable decision, means APRA.
person affected by a reviewable decision, in relation to a reviewable decision of a decision maker, means:
(a) in the case of a determination under subsection 93(3)—Lloyd’s or any Lloyd’s underwriter; or
(b) in any other case—the person in relation to whom the decision was made.
reviewable decision means a decision of APRA that is a decision to which, under this Act, this Part applies.
(2) A person affected by a reviewable decision who is dissatisfied with the decision may, by notice in writing given to the decision maker within the period of 21 days after the day on which the decision first comes to the notice of the person, or within such further period as the decision maker allows, request the decision maker to reconsider the decision.
(3) There shall be set out in the request the reasons for making the request.
(4) Upon receipt of the request, the decision maker shall reconsider the decision and may, subject to subsection (5), confirm or revoke the decision or vary the decision in such manner as the decision maker thinks fit.
(5) Where the decision maker does not confirm, revoke or vary a decision before the expiration of the period of 21 days after the day on which the decision maker received the request under subsection (2) to reconsider the decision, the decision maker shall, upon the expiration of that period, be deemed to have confirmed the decision under subsection (4).
(6) Where the decision maker confirms, revokes or varies a decision before the expiration of the period referred to in subsection (5), the decision maker shall, by notice served on the person who made the request, inform the person of the result of the decision maker’s reconsideration of the decision, set out the findings on material questions of fact, refer to the evidence or other material on which those findings were based and give the decision maker’s reasons for confirming, revoking or varying the decision, as the case may be.
(7) Applications may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for review of decisions of a decision maker that have been confirmed or varied under subsection (4).
(a) beginning on the day on which the decision is deemed to be confirmed; and
(b) ending 28 days after the day on which the decision is deemed to be confirmed.
(9) Where a person makes a request under subsection (2) in respect of a reviewable decision, section 32 of the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024 applies as if the making of the request were the making of an application to the Administrative Review Tribunal for a review of that decision.
(13) An order shall not be made under subsection 32(2) of the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024 in respect of a reviewable decision except by the Administrative Review Tribunal.
64 Statements to accompany notification of decisions
(1) Where a reviewable decision within the meaning of section 63 is made and notice in writing of the decision is given to a person affected by the decision, that notice shall include a statement to the effect that:
(a) the person may, if dissatisfied with the decision, seek a reconsideration of the decision by the decision maker in accordance with subsection 63(2); and
(b) a person whose interests are affected by the decision may, subject to the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024, if dissatisfied with a decision made by the decision maker upon that reconsideration confirming or varying the first‑mentioned decision, make application to the Administrative Review Tribunal for a review of the decision so confirmed or varied.
(2) Where a decision maker confirms or varies a decision under subsection 63(4) and gives to a person notice in writing of the confirmation or variation of the decision, that notice shall include a statement to the effect that a person whose interests are affected by the decision may, subject to the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024, if dissatisfied with the decision so confirmed or varied, make application to the Administrative Review Tribunal for review of the decision.
(3) Any failure to comply with the requirements of subsection (1) or (2) in relation to a decision does not affect the validity of the decision.
(4) In this section:
decision maker has the meaning given by section 63.
The following is a simplified outline of this Part:
• Lloyd’s will be required to ensure that there are in existence security trust fund arrangements under which final judgments obtained in Australia against Lloyd’s underwriters in respect of certain insurance liabilities may be satisfied out of trust property.
• Security trust funds in existence in fulfilment of such a requirement are called designated security trust funds.
• APRA may make rules that are applicable to designated security trust funds.
• Lloyd’s underwriters are authorised to carry on insurance business. However, that authorisation may be suspended or cancelled if there has been a contravention of this Part.
• APRA may require the appointment of an actuary to carry out an investigation of the extent to which a designated security trust fund constitutes an adequate security for the class of insurance liabilities secured by the fund.
• APRA has powers of inquiry, direction and investigation in relation to designated security trust funds that correspond to the powers conferred by Part V in relation to authorised corporate insurers.
• The Federal Court may make an order placing a designated security trust fund under judicial trusteeship.
• Lloyd’s, or a company nominated by Lloyd’s, is required to lodge with APRA a security deposit valued at $2 million. The deposit is available to meet the costs of judicial trusteeship of designated security trust funds.
In this Part:
designated security trust fund has the meaning given by section 69.
insurance liability means a liability under a contract of insurance.
judicial trustee has the meaning given by section 92.
legal personal representative means:
(a) the executor of the will, or the administrator of the estate, of a deceased person; or
(b) the trustee of the estate of a person under a legal disability; or
(c) a person who holds an enduring power of attorney granted by another person; or
(d) a person who, by order of a court or otherwise, has the legal administration or control of the affairs of another person.
qualified corporation means a body corporate that is:
(a) a corporation to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies; and
(b) a company incorporated, or taken to be incorporated, under the Corporation Act 2001.
security trust fund has the meaning given by section 67.
Division 2—Security trust fund arrangements
(1) For the purposes of this Part, a security trust fund is a trust fund established by deed, where:
(a) the trust property is available to satisfy final judgments obtained in Australia against Lloyd’s underwriters in respect of a class of insurance liabilities specified in the deed; and
(b) the trustee is a qualified corporation.
(2) For the purposes of this Part, the class of insurance liabilities specified in the deed as mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is said to be secured by the trust fund.
(3) For the purposes of this Part, a contract of insurance is covered by a security trust fund if insurance liabilities under the contract are secured by the fund.
(4) For the purposes of this section, a judgment is a final judgment if, and only if, it can no longer be appealed or set aside.
(5) In this section:
Lloyd’s underwriter includes:
(a) a former Lloyd’s underwriter; and
(b) the legal personal representative of a Lloyd’s underwriter or a former Lloyd’s underwriter.
68 Security trust fund arrangements
(1) APRA may, by legislative instrument, require Lloyd’s to ensure that, at all times when the instrument is in force, there are in existence:
(a) such security trust fund arrangements; and
(b) such ancillary or incidental arrangements;
as are specified in, or ascertained in accordance with, the instrument.
Note: The required arrangements may be varied—see subsection 33(3) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
(2) An instrument under subsection (1) may make provision for or in relation to a matter by conferring a power on APRA.
(3) An instrument under subsection (1) may:
(a) require a trust deed for a security trust fund to be approved by APRA; and
(b) require alterations of a trust deed for a security trust fund to be approved by APRA; and
(c) require the trustee of a security trust fund to be approved by APRA.
(4) Subsections (2) and (3) do not, by implication, limit subsection (1).
(5) If:
(a) an instrument under subsection (1) requires a trust deed for a security trust fund to be approved by APRA; and
(b) the approval is not obtained;
the failure to obtain the approval does not affect the validity of the establishment or operation of the fund.
(6) If:
(a) an instrument under subsection (1) requires an alteration of a trust deed for a security trust fund to be approved by APRA; and
(b) the approval is not obtained;
the alteration has no effect.
(7) If:
(a) an instrument under subsection (1) requires the trustee of a security trust fund to be approved by APRA; and
(b) the approval is not obtained;
the failure to obtain the approval does not affect the validity of the appointment of the trustee.
(8) Before making an instrument under subsection (1), APRA must consult Lloyd’s unless APRA is satisfied that the delay that would be involved in consulting Lloyd’s would be likely to prejudice the interests of the holders of contracts of insurance covered, or to be covered, by the fund or funds concerned. A failure to comply with this subsection does not affect the validity of the instrument.
(9) Section 70 does not, by implication, limit this section.
(11) A reference in subsection (1) to an ancillary or incidental arrangement includes a reference to an arrangement for the funding of a security trust fund.
(12) Lloyd’s must comply with an instrument in force under subsection (1).
69 Designated security trust funds
In this Part, a security trust fund that is, or was at any time, in existence in fulfilment of an obligation imposed by an instrument under subsection 68(1) is called a designated security trust fund.
70 Rules about designated security trust funds
(1) APRA may, by legislative instrument, make rules that are applicable to the operation of designated security trust funds.
(2) An instrument under subsection (1) may make provision for or in relation to a matter by conferring a power on APRA.
(3) An instrument under subsection (1) may make provision for or in relation to the following matters:
(a) the making available to the public of copies of trust deeds for funds;
(b) the keeping and retention of records in relation to funds;
(c) the accounts, financial reports and actuarial reports to be prepared in relation to funds;
(d) the auditing of accounts and financial reports prepared in relation to funds;
(e) the disclosure of information about funds to APRA;
(f) the inspection by APRA or an authorised person of records kept by funds;
(g) the preparation, and lodgment with APRA, of returns in relation to funds;
(h) the valuation of the assets of funds.
(4) Subsections (2) and (3) do not, by implication, limit subsection (1).
(6) Section 68 does not, by implication, limit this section.
(8) The trustee of a designated security trust fund must comply with any rules in force under subsection (1).
(9) A person who intentionally or recklessly contravenes subsection (8) commits an offence punishable on conviction by a fine not exceeding 200 penalty units.
71 Transfers to trustee of security trust fund—presumption of regularity
If:
(a) money or property is transferred to a person in the capacity of trustee of a particular designated security trust fund; and
(b) the transfer is for the purposes of this Division;
the money or property is taken to have been transferred to the person to be held on trust in accordance with the terms of the fund’s trust deed, irrespective of:
(c) the intention of the transferor; or
(d) the authority or capacity of the transferor.
(1) For the purposes of this Part, in determining the extent to which a security trust fund constitutes an adequate security for the class of insurance liabilities secured by the fund, regard must be had to:
(a) the arrangements relating to the establishment and operation of the fund; and
(b) any ancillary or incidental arrangements.
(2) Subsection (1) does not, by implication, limit the matters to which regard may be had.
(3) A reference in subsection (1) to an ancillary or incidental arrangement includes a reference to an arrangement for the funding of a security trust fund.
73 Affairs of security trust fund
For the purposes of this Part, the affairs of a security trust fund include the extent to which the fund constitutes, or is likely to constitute, an adequate security for the class of insurance liabilities secured by the fund.
Division 3—General powers of APRA
74 APRA may direct that Lloyd’s underwriters must not issue or renew policies
(1) If it appears to APRA that:
(a) there has been a contravention of any of the provisions of:
(i) this Division; or
(ii) Division 2 or 4; or
(b) as a result of an enactment of an Act of the United Kingdom, a substantial change is made in the constitution, powers, rights or obligations of Lloyd’s or of Lloyd’s underwriters; or
(c) as a result of a making of a by‑law by Lloyd’s, the rights or obligations of Lloyd’s underwriters are substantially changed;
APRA may, by written notice given to Lloyd’s, give either or both of the following directions:
(d) a direction that Lloyd’s underwriters must not issue policies or undertake liability under contracts of insurance;
(e) a direction that Lloyd’s underwriters must not renew policies.
(2) If:
(a) a direction under subsection (1) has been in force for a period of more than 180 days; and
(b) Lloyd’s requests APRA, in writing, to review the direction;
APRA must consider whether the direction should:
(c) remain in force; or
(d) be varied; or
(e) be revoked.
(3) In considering the matter referred to in subsection (2), APRA must have regard to:
(a) whether an investigation under Subdivision B of Division 4 is being, or has been, undertaken; and
(b) whether a determination under section 93 is in force; and
(c) such other matters (if any) as APRA considers relevant.
(4) If:
(a) a request is made under subsection (2) in relation to a direction; and
(b) the direction is still in force immediately before the end of the period of 30 days that began when the request was made;
the direction ceases to be in force at the end of that period.
(5) A Lloyd’s underwriter must comply with a direction in force under subsection (1).
(6) A person who intentionally or recklessly contravenes subsection (5) commits an offence punishable on conviction by a fine not exceeding 200 penalty units.
(7) A copy of a notice under subsection (1) is to be published in the Gazette.
75 Actuarial investigation of adequacy of security provided by designated security trust funds
(1) APRA may, by written notice given to Lloyd’s, require Lloyd’s to cause an actuary to be appointed to:
(a) carry out an investigation of the extent to which a specified designated security trust fund constitutes an adequate security for the class of insurance liabilities secured by the fund; and
(b) make a report on that investigation, being a report that contains statements of the actuary’s opinion about each of the matters specified in the notice.
(2) The actuary must not be:
(a) an officer of Lloyd’s; or
(b) an officer of a body corporate specified in a determination made, by legislative instrument, by APRA for the purposes of this paragraph.
(3) Lloyd’s must, within 14 days after the date on which the notice was given, advise APRA, in writing, of the name of the actuary.
(4) If APRA notifies Lloyd’s that the actuary is not acceptable to APRA, Lloyd’s must, within 14 days after the date on which the notice was given:
(a) cause a different actuary to be appointed; and
(b) advise APRA, in writing, of the name of the actuary so appointed.
(5) APRA may, within 14 days after the advice was given under subsection (3) or (4), notify Lloyd’s, in writing, that the actuary is not acceptable to APRA.
(6) Lloyd’s must cause the actuary’s report to be given to APRA:
(a) within 30 days after the date on which the notice was given to Lloyd’s under subsection (1); or
(b) within such further time as APRA, by written notice, allows.
(7) The actuary’s report must be signed by the actuary.
(8) Lloyd’s must comply with this section.
(10) In this section:
officer, in relation to a body corporate, has the same meaning as in the Corporations Act 2001.
76 Provision for liabilities in the accounts of designated security trust funds
(1A) APRA may give a written notice under subsection (1) if APRA has reason to believe that the provision for liabilities in the accounts of a designated security trust fund is insufficient.
(1) APRA may, by written notice given to the trustee of the designated security trust fund, direct that the trustee must, within such period after the giving of the notice as is specified in the notice, make provision, or further provision, in the accounts of the fund:
(a) of a specified amount; or
(b) of an amount determined in a specified manner;
in respect of any or all of the liabilities secured by the fund.
(2) The period specified in the direction must be at least 14 days.
(3) The powers of APRA under this section are in addition to, and do not limit, the powers of APRA under Division 4.
(4) The trustee of a designated security trust fund must comply with a direction given to the trustee under subsection (1).
(5) If:
(a) a direction under subsection (1) is in force in relation to a fund; and
(b) the fund commences to be under judicial trusteeship in accordance with Division 5;
the direction ceases to have effect on that commencement.
(6) A direction given to the trustee of a designated security trust fund under subsection (1) does not require the trustee to incur any financial liability by way of funding the security trust fund.
Subdivision A—Inquiries and directions by APRA
(1) APRA may, by written notice given to Lloyd’s or the trustee of a designated security trust fund, require Lloyd’s or the trustee, as the case may be, to give to APRA, within such period after the giving of the notice as is specified in the notice, such information about the affairs of:
(a) in the case of a notice given to Lloyd’s—a specified designated security trust fund; or
(b) in the case of a notice given to the trustee of a designated security trust fund—the fund;
as is specified in the notice.
(2) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days.
(3) A person must comply with a requirement under subsection (1).
(4) A person who intentionally or recklessly contravenes subsection (3) commits an offence punishable on conviction by a fine not exceeding 200 penalty units.
78 Direction not to deal with certain assets
(1) This section applies to a designated security trust fund if APRA has reason to believe that the fund does not constitute, or is unlikely to constitute, an adequate security for the class of insurance liabilities secured by the fund.
(2) APRA may, by written notice given to the trustee of the fund, direct:
(a) that the trustee must not dispose of, or otherwise deal with or remove from Australia, any asset of the fund; or
(b) that the trustee must not dispose of, or otherwise deal with or remove from Australia, a specified asset of the fund; or
(c) that the trustee must deal with a specified asset of the fund on such terms and conditions as are specified in the notice.
Note: For specification by class, see subsection 33(3AB) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
(3) If:
(a) a direction under subsection (2) has been in force in relation to a fund for a period of more than 6 months; and
(b) Lloyd’s or the trustee of the fund requests APRA, in writing, to review the direction;
APRA must consider whether the direction should:
(c) remain in force; or
(d) be varied; or
(e) be revoked.
(4) In considering the matter referred to in subsection (3), APRA must have regard to:
(a) whether an investigation under Subdivision B is being, or has been, undertaken in relation to the fund; and
(b) whether a determination under section 93 is in force; and
(c) such other matters (if any) as APRA considers relevant.
(5) If:
(a) a request is made under subsection (3) in relation to a direction; and
(b) the direction is still in force immediately before the end of the period of 30 days that began when the request was made;
the direction ceases to be in force at the end of that period.
(6) A person must comply with a direction under subsection (2).
(7) A person who intentionally or recklessly contravenes subsection (6) commits an offence punishable on conviction by a fine not exceeding 200 penalty units.
(8) This section does not affect the validity of a transaction entered into in contravention of a direction under subsection (2).
(9) If:
(a) a direction under subsection (2) is in force in relation to a fund; and
(b) the fund commences to be under judicial trusteeship in accordance with Division 5;
the direction ceases to have effect on that commencement.
79 Investigation of designated security trust fund by APRA or inspector
(1) If it appears to APRA that:
(a) a designated security trust fund does not constitute, or is unlikely to constitute, an adequate security for the class of insurance liabilities secured by the fund; or
(b) Lloyd’s or the trustee of a designated security trust fund has contravened a provision of this Part;
APRA may, by written notice given to Lloyd’s, require Lloyd’s to show cause, within such period after the giving of the notice as is specified in the notice, why APRA should not, on specified grounds:
(c) investigate the whole or any part of the affairs of the fund; or
(d) appoint a person to make such an investigation and report to APRA the results of his or her investigation.
(2) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days.
(3) If:
(a) Lloyd’s fails, within the period specified in the notice, to show cause to the satisfaction of APRA why an investigation should not be made; and
(b) APRA is satisfied that it is in the public interest that an investigation should be made;
APRA may:
(c) make the investigation itself; or
(d) in writing, appoint a person (in this Division called the inspector) to make the investigation.
(4) Before beginning an investigation of a trust fund, APRA or the inspector, as the case may be, must give the trustee of the fund:
(a) in all cases—a written notice by APRA specifying the matters into which the investigation is to be made, being the whole or some part of the affairs of the trust fund; and
(b) in the case of the inspector—a copy of the instrument appointing the inspector.
(5) The inspector is to be a person resident in Australia.
(1) If APRA or the inspector, while investigating the whole or a part of the affairs of a designated security trust fund, believes on reasonable grounds that it is necessary for the purposes of the investigation to enter land or premises occupied by:
(a) the trustee, or a former trustee, of the fund; or
(b) the custodian, or a former custodian, of the fund; or
(c) the investment manager, or a former investment manager, of the fund;
an authorised person (if the investigation is by APRA), or the inspector, may, at all reasonable times, enter the land or premises and may:
(d) examine books on the land or premises that relate to the affairs of the trust fund or that the authorised person or inspector believes on reasonable grounds relate to those affairs; and
(e) take possession of any of those books for such period as the authorised person or inspector thinks necessary for the purposes of the investigation; and
(f) make copies of, or take extracts from, any of those books.
(2) The authorised person or the inspector must permit a person otherwise entitled to possession of the books, or a person authorised by that person, to inspect those books.
(3) The authorised person or the inspector must not exercise the power conferred by subsection (1) to enter residential land or residential premises if the occupier of the land or premises has not consented to the entry.
81 Powers of APRA or the inspector to obtain information etc.
(1) For the purposes of this section, a person is a prescribed person in relation to a designated security trust fund if:
(a) the person is, or has at any time been, the trustee, custodian or investment manager of the trust fund; or
(b) the person would be a prescribed person (within the meaning of Part V) in relation to a person referred to in paragraph (a) if it were assumed that a reference in the definition of prescribed person in subsection 50(1) to a body corporate included a reference to an individual.
(2) If APRA or the inspector is investigating a designated security trust fund, APRA or the inspector may, by written notice given to a person who is a prescribed person in relation to the fund, require the person:
(a) to produce to APRA or the inspector any or all of the books relating to the affairs of the fund that are in the custody or under the control of the person; or
(b) to give to APRA or the inspector all reasonable assistance in connection with the investigation; or
(c) to appear before an authorised person or the inspector for examination concerning matters relevant to the investigation.
(3) If books are produced to APRA or the inspector under this section:
(a) APRA or the inspector may take possession of them for such period as APRA or inspector thinks necessary for the purposes of the investigation; and
(b) APRA or inspector may make copies of, and take extracts, from them.
However, APRA must permit a person otherwise entitled to possession of the books, or a person authorised by that person, to inspect those books.
(3A) APRA’s powers under subsection (3) to make copies of, or take extracts from, books may be exercised on APRA’s behalf by an authorised person.
(4) A person who complies with a requirement of APRA or the inspector under this section does not incur any liability to any other person only because of that compliance.
82 Persons to comply with requirements of APRA or the inspector
(1) A person must not intentionally or recklessly contravene a requirement of APRA or the inspector under section 81 that is applicable to the person, to the extent to which the person is able to comply with it.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months.
(3) A person being examined by an authorised person or the inspector is not excused from answering a question put to the person by the authorised person or the inspector on the ground that the question might tend to incriminate the person.
(4) However, if the answer might tend to incriminate the person, none of the following:
(a) the question;
(b) the answer;
(c) any information, document or thing obtained as a direct or indirect consequence of giving the answer;
is admissible in evidence against the person in criminal proceedings other than a prosecution for an offence against section 137.1 or 137.2 of the Criminal Code that relates to section 81.
83 Person may be represented by a legal practitioner
A barrister or solicitor acting for a person being examined by an authorised person or the inspector:
(a) may attend the examination; and
(b) may, to the extent that the authorised person or the inspector allows:
(i) address the authorised person or the inspector; or
(ii) examine the person;
in relation to matters in respect of which the authorised person or the inspector has questioned the person.
84 Notes of examination of person
(1) An authorised person or the inspector may cause notes of an examination of a person under this Division to be recorded in writing and read to or by that person.
(2) The authorised person or the inspector may require the person to sign the notes.
(3) Notes signed by the person may be used in evidence in proceedings under this Act against the person. This rule has effect subject to subsections 82(3) and (4).
(4) A copy of the notes signed by the person are to be given to the person without charge if the person makes a written request to APRA or the inspector for a copy.
(5) If the inspector causes notes to be recorded under this section, the notes must be given to APRA with the report of the investigation concerned.
(1) Powers under this Division may be delegated as follows:
(a) APRA’s powers may be delegated under section 15 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998;
(b) an inspector may, by signed instrument, delegate his or her powers to an APRA member or an APRA staff member.
(2) A delegate must, on the request of the trustee of a designated security trust fund in relation to which the delegated powers are exercisable or of a person affected by the exercise of those powers, produce the instrument of delegation, or a copy, for inspection.
86 Report of APRA or the inspector
(1) The inspector:
(a) may make one or more reports in writing to APRA during the investigation of the whole or a part of the affairs of the trust fund and must, if so directed in writing by APRA, make such reports as are specified in the direction; and
(b) must, on the completion or termination of the investigation, report in writing to APRA on the result of the investigation.
(2) APRA must, on the completion or termination of an investigation made by APRA, make a report in writing on the result of the investigation.
(3) A report made on the completion of the investigation must include:
(a) a statement of the opinion of APRA or the inspector in relation to the extent to which the fund constitutes an adequate security for the class of insurance liabilities secured by the fund; and
(b) the recommendations of APRA or the inspector in relation to the following:
(i) whether a notice should be given under subsection 93(2);
(ii) whether an application should be made under subsection 88(1).
(4) APRA or inspector must not include in a report:
(a) a recommendation relating to the institution of criminal proceedings; or
(b) a statement to the effect that, in APRA’s or the inspector’s opinion, a specified person has committed a criminal offence.
(5) If the inspector is of the opinion that criminal proceedings ought to be instituted or that a person has committed a criminal offence, the inspector must advise APRA, in writing of that opinion.
(6) APRA must give a copy of a report made by or given to APRA under this section to Lloyd’s and the trustee of the fund concerned. This subsection has effect subject to subsection (7).
(7) APRA:
(a) must seek the advice of the Attorney‑General before giving a copy of the report to Lloyd’s or the trustee; and
(b) must not give a copy of the report to Lloyd’s or the trustee if the Attorney‑General advises APRA that, having regard to proceedings that have been or might be instituted, a copy of the report should not be given to Lloyd’s or the trustee.
(8) If a copy of the report has been given to Lloyd’s or the trustee, APRA may, if APRA considers that it is in the public interest to do so and after taking into consideration any advice APRA has received from the Attorney‑General, cause the whole or some part of the report to be published.
(9) A court before which proceedings (whether under this Act or otherwise) are brought against a person in respect of matters dealt with in a report under this Division may order that a copy of the report be given to the person.
A person must not, with intent to defeat the purposes of this Division or with intent to delay or obstruct the carrying out of an investigation under this Division:
(a) conceal, destroy, mutilate or alter a book relating to the affairs of a trust fund the affairs of which are being investigated under this Division; or
(b) send, cause to be sent, or conspire with another person to send, out of Australia a book or any money or property belonging to or under the control of the trustee of such a trust fund.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months.