The inquiry into banks and financial services firms has revealed malpractice that in some cases has ruined lives

What is the royal commission?

The banking royal commission was established in late December, after years of public pressure from whistleblowers, consumer groups, the Greens, Labor, and some Nationals MPs.
Its first public hearings began on 13 March, and they will run at irregular intervals through 2018.
The royal commission has been asked to investigate whether any of Australia’s financial services entities have engaged in misconduct, and if criminal or other legal proceedings should be referred to the commonwealth.            
It’s also been asked to consider if sufficient mechanisms are in place to compensate victims.

What have we found out so far?

We’ve heard evidence of appalling behaviour by Australia’s major banks and financial planners from the past decade, including alleged bribery, forged documents, repeated failure to verify customers’ living expenses before lending them money, and misselling insurance to people who can’t afford it.
In this week’s hearings, AMP admitted to lying to regulators, and the Commonwealth Bank admitted some of its financial planners have been charging fees to clients who have died.
AMP’s chief executive became the first high profile casualty of the commission announcing he was standing down from the company with immediate effect.

Which banks are involved ?

The so-called big four banks – Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, ANZ, National Australia Bank – are being looked at. They comprise four of the five largest companies in Australia by market value, holding an inordinate amount of power over the financial system.
Other companies including AMP, BT Financial, Aussie Home Loans and St George, and a number of small car finance companies will also be called, and more financial institutions will be asked to appear as the year rolls on.                               
Last year, the Commonwealth Bank, which is the largest company in the country, posted a full-year cash profit of $9.8bn, up 4.6%. It was followed by Westpac (full-year profit $8.1bn, up 3%), ANZ ($6.4bn, up 12%), and NAB ($6.6bn, up 2.5%).
Australia’s seven largest authorised deposit-taking institutions (including the big four) hold roughly $4.6 trillion in assets – around two and a half times the size of Australia’s $1.8 trillion economy, as measured by nominal GDP.

What is the problem with their financial advice?

The banks discovered long ago it was highly profitable to sell their customers financial advice and financial products. If they could charge customers for financial advice, and if that “advice” consisted of purchasing their financial products, then they would enjoy a profitable feedback loop.