ASIC bans advisor
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has banned Sydney-based finan-cial adviser Howard Owen for two years.
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has banned Sydney-based finan-cial adviser Howard Owen for two years.
ASIC says Howard Jeffrey Owen was banned following an investigation of his role in promoting investment in the Queensland-based Wattle Group, a failed pyramid investment scheme. ASIC reported to federal parliament last year that the Wattle scheme had raised $130 million from 2700 people.
ASIC says Mr Owen failed to adequately research the viability of investments in the Wattle scheme before recommending it to his clients. Owen had "not acted efficiently, honestly and fairly and he fell short of the professional standards required of a representative in the securities industry", ASIC says.
In promoting Wattle, he had also acted outside the scope of the conditions imposed on the deal-ers licence of Australian Tea Tree Management, for whom he was a representative from June 1997 to March 1999.
Further, Owen had failed to fully disclose financial benefits exceeding $600,000 received both by himself and third parties as a consequence of his clients investing in Wattle between Decem-ber 1995 and March 1998.
Recommended for you
With the final tally for FY25 now confirmed, how many advisers left during the financial year and how does it compare to the previous year?
HUB24 has appointed Matt Willis from Vanguard as an executive general manager of platform growth to strengthen the platform’s relationships with industry stakeholders.
Investment manager Drummond Capital Partners has announced a raft of adviser-focused updates, including a practice growth division, relaunched manager research capabilities, and a passive model portfolio suite.
When it comes to M&A activity, the share of financial buyers such as private equity firms in Australia fell from 67 per cent to 12 per cent in the last financial year.