Regulatory technology (regtech) will be a ‘must have’ for large firms in Australia’s financial services industry, according to ASIC’s Regtech Initiatives 2018–19 report.
The report covers observations and findings from four initiatives coordinated by ½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþin 2019. Each initiative was designed to explore how regtech can help businesses better manage their conduct-of-business compliance issues. By doing so, businesses can spend less time on compliance and more time maintaining market integrity and promoting better outcomes for consumers.
The four initiatives were:
- Financial Promotions Demonstration and Symposium: Five demonstrators analysed financial promotional material (both traditional and non-traditional media) to extract key features that identified potential risk and non-compliance characteristics.
- Financial Advice Files Demonstration and Symposium: Six demonstrators investigated how regtech could improve compliance and consumer advice outcomes.
- Voice Analytics and Voice-to-Text Symposium: Three demonstrators chosen by tender process examined how voice analytics, applied to over 1,700 insurance sales phone calls, could assist in analysing a sellers’ behaviour.
- Technology-assisted Guidance Tool: One regtech firm chosen by tender process designed a tool for ½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþto provide user-friendly licensing guidance.
The initiatives showed Australian regtech solutions can:
- detect potential breaches of mandatory disclosure requirements in financial promotions, with high rates of accuracy, at near real-time
- detect potential conduct breaches in financial advice files such as statements of advice (SOA)
- identify cases of poor sales practices/tactics in phone calls (stored, non-compressed recordings using voice analytics and voice-to-text technology)
- help ½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþprovide guidance on licencing using a chatbot.
As well as summarising the results of symposium participants, the report includes observations from demonstrators and observers. While there is a great deal of activity in Australia’s regtech sector, many attendees believed that regtech’s inherently experimental nature has limited Australian research and development (R&D) funding to date.
'Particularly in the financial services and superannuation sectors, regtech has enormous potential to help firms save time and money on regulatory matters,' says Commissioner John Price. '½ñÈÕÈÈÃÅʼþbelieves that we will soon reach the tipping point where not investing in regtech R&D will cost firms more in the long run.'
The report reflects observations that regtech will augment – not eliminate – roles in risk-management and compliance in Australia’s financial services industry.