‘Punishing banks hits customers’
BCA chief Jennifer Westacott has warned against penalising the banks for misconduct by denying them a corporate tax cut.
BCA chief Jennifer Westacott has warned against penalising the banks for misconduct by denying them a corporate tax cut.
The bank inquiry has exposed celebrity financial guru Sam Henderson as the most dangerous type of adviser.
Tim Storer says unlike Pauline Hanson and Derryn Hinch he won’t call for banks to be quarantined from company tax cuts.
Former Nationals MP Fiona Nash admits she was wrong and the Royal Commission into banks should have occurred earlier.
Malcolm Turnbull has conceded it was a clear political error not to call a banking royal commission.
The insurer faces a lengthy period of uncertainty and it’s too early for investors to jump in.
Banks use virtue signalling as a diversion from the toxic culture and perverse incentives that shape relationship with customers.
ACTU secretary Sally McManus has urged industry super funds to reconsider their links with the major banks.
Tony Abbott has blamed finance industry regulator ASIC for failing to prevent wrongdoing by the big banks.
Scott Morrison won’t concede government should’ve acted sooner, lashing Bill Shorten’s inaction as financial services minister.
An MP who campaigned for a banks inquiry for years says Coalition frontbenchers should admit they were wrong.
And it would be sheer political madness to take the company tax cuts to the next election.
The finance sector is more cartel than competition – that’s what must change.
Rewarding executives for chasing short-term profits at the expense of long-term stability was dangerous, an AMP executive warned.
Kelly O’Dwyer doesn’t agree banks should be quarantined from getting the government’s planned business tax cut as opposed by Derryn Hinch.
Financial Services Minister’s fiery TV defence of the government over the bank inquiry shows it has learned nothing, Labor says.
Percentage fees are the dirty secret at the heart of the corruption of financial services. Ban them.
ANZ subsidiary RI Advice allowed an adviser who failed its audits to continue giving advice to clients, the inquiry heard.
Wrongdoing uncovered by the royal commission forces bank heads to admit their opposition to the inquiry was a mistake.
AMP chairwoman Catherine Brenner was caught red-handed in the middle of the cover-up.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/topics/bank-inquiry/page/32