Westpoint planner action put back a month

insurance/financial-planners/director/

1 May 2006
| By Ross Kelly |

By Ross Kelly

Law firm Slater and Gordon will not start legal action against financial planners who sold clients Westpoint products for about another month, and it will target the bigger dealer groups first.

“It’s a slow process, and what we’re doing is taking client information and documents and grouping them, looking at the insurance and asset position of the planners and the licence holders,” said Slater and Gordon lawyer and co-ordinator of the actions Rob Lees.

According to Lees, the law firm at present is looking to possibly represent 800 clients and the number is consistently growing towards an earlier estimate of 2,000.

“Unfortunately, there’s a lot of people making a lot of statements against many parties like the planning groups, Westpoint’s directors and Westpoint’s auditors, so it is very difficult for the mums and dads at home trying to work out what they should be doing with this,” Lees said.

He said Slater and Gordon would not wait until most client complaints had been processed before launching its first test case.

“Otherwise we’d never get them done. We’ll be looking at the large groups first.”

Lees also ruled out Slater and Gordon taking any direct action against Westpoint auditor KPMG, which last week was accused of malpractice by a former Westpoint director.

Richard Beck, a key capital raiser for Westpoint, said he warned KPMG his company was pooling funds from separate developments into a “common pot”.

He also warned them that he thought Westpoint’s Ann Street Mezzanine fund, one of the first to collapse, was raising more money from investors than it had disclosed.

KPMG has dismissed the claims as baseless.

“We don’t have access to the audit books and we don’t have details of audit contracts,” Lees said.

“So we don’t know specifically what they were required to audit and what they did and didn’t know — certainly the liquidators would be in a better position at this time. So KPMG is one we’re looking at, but a lot more information needs to come to hand.”

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?...

2 months 2 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 2 weeks ago

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

4 months 3 weeks ago

ASIC has suspended the Australian Financial Services Licence of a Melbourne-based financial advice firm....

4 days 23 hours ago

The corporate regulator has issued infringement notices to three AFSLs whose financial advisers provided personal advice to a retail client while unregistered....

1 week 3 days ago

ASIC has released the results of its first adviser exam to be held in 2025, with 241 candidates attempting the test....

2 weeks 1 day ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND