Commerce Commission files proceedings against Westpac
The Commerce Commission has announced that it has filed proceedings against Westpac New Zealand.
THE COMMERCE Commission is taking three major banks, ANZ, ASB and Westpac to court over the selling of interest swap contracts to rural customers.
The Commerce Commissions says it has advised those three banks that it intends to issue legal proceedings over their sales of interest rate swap contracts.
The Commission has advised the banks that in its view there is sufficient evidence that they may have breached sections 9, 11 and/ or 13 of the Fair Trading Act (FTA), and that it wishes to place the matter before the Court for its decision.
Commerce Commission chairman Dr Mark Berry says the commission aims to file proceedings in March 2014.
"This has been a very extensive and complex investigation, but that phase of it is almost at an end," says Dr Berry. "We have advised the banks of our views that swaps were misrepresented to rural customers. I expect to have more talks with the banks about these views, and about the different facts that might apply to each of them, over the coming months.
"Because court proceedings are in prospect, the commission will not be commenting further at this time."
The commission is also considering the conduct of other institutions that have sold interest rate swaps.
The commission encourages affected swap customers to contact the commission on 0800 943 600.
Interest rate swaps are a financial derivative product that allows a borrower to manage the interest rate exposure on their borrowing. Interest rate swaps were typically provided to large corporate and institutional customers, but from 2005 were offered by various banks to rural customers throughout New Zealand.
In August 2012 the Commission began enquiring into whether interest rate swaps were misleadingly marketed from 2005.
There was much theatre in the Beehive before the Government's new Resource Management Act (RMA) reform bills were introduced into Parliament last week.
The government has unveiled yet another move which it claims will unlock the potential of the country’s cities and region.
The government is hailing the news that food and fibre exports are predicted to reach a record $62 billion in the next year.
The final Global Dairy Trade (GDT) auction has delivered bad news for dairy farmers.
One person intimately involved in the new legislation to replace the Resource Management Act (RMA) is the outgoing chief executive of the Ministry for the Environment, James Palmer, who's also worked in local government.
T&G Global says its 2025 New Zealand apple season has delivered higher returns for growers, reflecting strong global consumer demand and pricing across its Envy and Jazz apple brands.