Australian regulator sues Westpac bank alleging poor financial advice

Reuters  |  SYDNEY 

(Reuters) - Australia's securities regulator said on Friday it had filed a lawsuit against the country's second-biggest lender, Banking Corp, over alleged poor financial advice.

The (ASIC) said it filed a civil lawsuit alleging that a former breached the "best interests" duty under the Corporations Act, provided inappropriate financial advice and failed to prioritise the interests of clients.

In court documents made public by ASIC, the regulator said it was seeking fines, payment of its costs and declarations that the Sydney-based failed to do all things necessary to provide "efficiently, honestly and fairly".

A was not immediately available for comment.

The lawsuit was the second for Westpac from this year. Last month, the was cleared by a court of accusations levelled by that it rigged a key rate to boost profit.

Australia's banks are under intense scrutiny as a year-long public inquiry into sector misconduct, now in its fifth month, airs almost daily allegations wrongdoing.

The lawsuit brought by on Friday was not related to any testimony aired at the inquiry so far.

Westpac shares were not immediately affected by of the fresh legal matter, trading up 1.8 percent in mid-afternoon, in line with the broader market.

(Reporting by Byron Kaye; Editing by Stephen Coates)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, June 15 2018. 09:51 IST