AAT upholds ASIC’s ban for former Provident Capital director

ASIC/ban/AAT/Provident-Capital/

7 February 2022
| By Oksana Patron |
image
image
expand image

The Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC’s) banning and disqualification from 2015 of former Provident Capital director, Michael Roger O’Sullivan, has been upheld by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT).

This would mean that O’Sullivan, of Mosman, Sydney, would be banned from providing financial services for seven years and disqualified from managing corporations.

However, the AAT, which handed down its decision on 27 January, 2022, reduced the period of O’Sullivan’s disqualification from managing corporations from five years to two years and nine months, which will be in place until 20 September, 2024.

At the same time, the seven-year ban on him providing financial services would be in place until 16 February, 2022.

When he was fined in 2015, ASIC found he had failed fulfil his duties as a director and broke financial services laws as well as failing to carry out due care and diligence in the overseeing and recording of the largest loan made by Provident Capital through its fixed term investment portfolio.

In reviewing ASIC’s findings this year regarding O’Sullivan on remittal of the hearing by the Federal Court, the Tribunal found O’Sullivan:

  • failed to exercise due care and diligence in relation to the management of the largest loan (the Burleigh Views Loan) made by Provident Capital Limited (PCL), by deciding to accrue interest on that loan as earned and recoverable income rather than characterising that loan as being in arrears;
  • made inadequate disclosures or misleading statements in a prospectus and information booklets regarding debentures issued by PCL;
  • made inadequate disclosures or misleading statements regarding the Burleigh Views Loan in reports to the debenture trustee, Australian Executor Trustees Limited (AETL);
  • was involved in PCL making inadequate disclosures or misleading statements to AETL about the status of the Burleigh View Loan, the status of the development approval, the valuation information about the property, and the risk of a debt shortfall on any realisation of the property;
  • failed to exercise due care and diligence and used his position improperly to gain advantages for himself in securing the release of a personal guarantee he had provided for a loan from PCL to a related company, Cashflow Finance Solution, of which he was a director.

 

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

So we are now underwriting criminal scams?...

1 month 3 weeks ago

Glad to see the back of you Steve. You made financial more expensive, not more affordable as you claim, and presided ...

2 months ago

Completely agree Peter. The definition of 'significant change is circumstances relevant to the scope of the advice' is s...

4 months ago

Entireti has unveiled the new name for the AMP financial advice businesses that it acquired last year....

4 weeks ago

A Sydney financial adviser has been permanently banned from providing any financial services, with the regulator deriding his “lack of integrity, trustworthiness and prof...

2 weeks 5 days ago

Minister for Financial Services, Stephen Jones, has provided further information about the second tranche of the Delivering Better Financial Outcomes (DBFO) reforms....

1 week 4 days ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS