Can Hayne Really Change Bank Culture?

 | Oct 04, 2018 13:28

Originally published by Cuffelinks

The Financial Services Royal Commission has done an excellent job uncovering poor behaviour, including conduct that is already contrary to the law. It has exposed negligent regulatory practices, particularly in financial advice and insurance. Some parts of banking, such as the use of mortgage brokers and loans to small businesses, have been examined in detail. The list of “Issues that have emerged” starts on page 327 of the Interim Report. It’s notable in this list that the majority of bank activity that directly affects its customers has avoided any detailed scrutiny.

In his Executive Summary, Commissioner Kenneth Hayne is refreshingly honest that simply passing new laws is unlikely to change much:

“The law already requires entities to ‘do all things necessary to ensure’ that the services they are licensed to provide are provided ‘efficiently, honestly and fairly’. Much more often than not, the conduct now condemned was contrary to law. Passing some new law to say, again, ‘Do not do that’, would add an extra layer of legal complexity to an already complex regulatory regime. What would that gain?”

The Commissioner goes on the examine bank behaviour and culture, and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg used that ‘culture’ word repeatedly in his comments:

“This Interim Report is a frank and scathing assessment of the culture, conduct and compliance in our financial system … having the right culture depends on people having the right standards and doing their jobs properly.”

Surely, this issue of ‘culture’ and problems defining it and changing it are the biggest hurdles to achieving long-term, sustainable change. One page 317, the Commissioner gets to the heart of this difficulty:

“Changing culture in the Australian banks may not be easy and may take time. It cannot be assumed that entities will embrace change willingly or immediately. It cannot be assumed that entities will make desirable changes at all levels of the organisation.”

And there’s the critical issue. This is not about the bank CEOs offering apologies and accepting responsibility. It is about the thousands of day-to-day decisions made across the banks which affect millions of Australians which the CEOs never know about. In particular, the most significant impact on loans, deposits and services is what happens in the bank pricing committees.

h2 We’ve gone down the culture path many times before/h2
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ASIC is heavily criticised in the Interim Report for its failure to take stronger action against the banks on regulatory failings. This seems justified, but the former Chairman of ASIC, Greg Medcraft, did attempt to raise the culture issue and often found critics.

For example, at the 2016 ASIC Annual Forum, the overall theme was ‘Culture Shock’, and Medcraft said:

“Inevitably, it is the stories of poor culture and poor conduct in the financial industry which are splashed across the front page of the newspaper, which pop up in our newsfeeds, and which are the subjects of heated discussion on social media sites.”

In response, former CBA (AX:CBA) Managing Director, Chair of the Financial System Inquiry and current Chair of AMP (AX:AMP), David Murray, shot ASIC a cannonball when he told a Fairfax Media event on 5 April 2016 that it was:

“… extraordinarily disappointing that ASIC should go down this culture tangent which will do more damage than good … It’s anticompetitive, it’s inefficient, and to be perfectly candid, there have been people in the world who have tried to enforce culture. Adolf Hitler comes to mind.”

He later apologised for the Hitler reference, but this illustrates attitudes at senior levels of banking, and it was only a few years ago that Murray’s Inquiry was lauded for its work.

The then Prime Minister, Malcolm Turnbull, weighed in with these strong words at a Westpac function on 6 April 2016:

“We expect our banks to have high standards, we expect them always rigorously to put their customers’ interests first, to deal with their depositors and their borrowers, those they advise and those with whom they transact, in precisely the same way they would have them deal with themselves. This is not idealism, this is what we expect … Wise bankers understand that banks need to very publicly demonstrate that their values of trust, integrity, placing the customers first in every way, they must be lived and not just spoken about.

So we’ve done the culture and behaviour rounds many times before.