MLC Life fined $10m for misleading customers



The Federal Court has ordered MLC Limited pay a $10 million penalty for failing to pay promised benefits, resulting from a lack of appropriate systems to administer its insurance policies.
Additionally, MLC Life also provided approximately $11.8 million in remediation to approximately 1,000 impacted customers.
The Federal Court made declarations that MLC Life had contravened the Corporations Act, the ASIC Act, and the Insurance Contracts Act for failures to:
- pay a rehabilitation benefit to almost 120 customers who had undertaken approved rehabilitation programs following injury and/or disability;
- have adequate processes to review and, if appropriate, promptly update its medical definitions for critical illnesses in certain policies; and
- adequately train and monitor staff about communications to customers regarding the administration of their policy, including policy schedules and premium notices.
“Customers should be able to trust that their insurer will pay the benefits promised to them and keep them properly informed if there are changes to their policies,” ASIC Deputy Chair Sarah Court said.
“The failings recognised by the Court are the result of poor governance, poor controls and poor systems, such as legacy IT systems. MLC customers deserve to have their insurance policies administered properly”.
The corporate regulator added it would continue to take action against insurers who did not act in accordance with their duty of good faith to their customers.
Along with the penalty, the Court ordered MLC Life to publish an adverse publicity notice on its website.
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.
Good one ASIC!! not sure how they come up with the $10m and i hope they are going to disperse it out b/w the clients who have been impacted and the advisers who will have spent hours trying to clean up the mess (yeah as if). But its a good start - next stop - Resolution life.... plenty of room for improvement there!