WealthSure gets EU, Pawski steps down



The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has accepted an enforceable undertaking from WealthSure and WealthSure Financial Services, as well as its managing director, Darren Pawski.
The EU comes after the regulator reviewed the dealer group's compliance systems and found recurring deficiencies and a so-called 'lite-touch' approach to compliance.
"ASIC is concerned that WealthSure's commitment to compliance is inadequate," the regulator said in a media statement. "This has resulted in a business culture that has not given sufficient priortity to risk management, with consequent detrimental outcomes for consumers."
Furthermore, ASIC found the dealer group's former CEO and current managing director Darren Pawski was instrumental in WealthSure's "multiple compliance failures". Under his EU, Pawski agreed to step down from his role as managing director.
He will permanently refrain from providing financial services, take part in WealthSure’s management or have any key involvement with an Australian Financial Services Licensee.
The regulator noted WealthSure and Pawski fully cooperated and worked constructively with ASIC during this investigation.
WealthSure’s “lite-touch” to compliance, ASIC said, resulted in a failure to review the advice provided by its financial planners; failure to properly monitor its authorised representatives or identify poor or non-compliant advice.
However, the WA-based dealer group has acknowledged ASIC’s concerns and made significant progress in the lasts six months.
This includes appointing qualified and experienced staff to key positions, including the appointment of former Plan B executive David Newman as new CEO.
The group also engaged external compliance consultants to assist in the review of its functions.
Recommended for you
With an advice M&A deal taking around six months to enact, two experts have shared their tips on how buyers and sellers can avoid “deal fatigue” and prevent potential deals from collapsing.
Several financial advisers have been shortlisted in the ninth annual Women in Finance Awards 2025, to be held on 14 November.
Digital advice tools are on the rise, but licensees will need to ensure they still meet adviser obligations or potentially risk a class action if clients lose money from a rogue algorithm.
Shaw and Partners has merged with Sydney wealth manager Kennedy Partners Wealth, while Ord Minnett has hired a private wealth adviser from Morgan Stanley.