feedSubscribe to our news feeds
Archived Posts Lists

Australian Regulatory Compliance Review
Australian Technology and IP Business
Credit Union and Mutual Law
National Consumer Credit Reform
Personal Property Securities Australia
Longview Business Insights
Australian Private Health Insurers
Wills, Trusts, Super
Mutuals Resource Centre

Resources

Commonwealth legislation
Corporate Governance
Not-for-Profit links
Regulator Links

July 31, 2008

APRA’s prudential requirements for First Home Saver Accounts

APRA has released the final package relating to the authorisation and prudential oversight of providers of First Home Saver Accounts (FHSAs).

The package comprises a prudential standard relating to superannuation licensees (known as RSE licensees), an authorisation form, a notification of intention to offer FHSAs form and a reporting standard. The standards will be effective from 1 October.

The First Home Saver Accounts Act 2008 (FHSA Act allows for public offer and extended public offer RSE licensees, life companies and authorised deposit-taking institutions (ADIs) to provide these accounts. Under the FHSA Act, RSE licensees will have to establish a separate trust for this purpose and the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 will not apply to this new trust. RSE licensees must demonstrate that risks arising from this new trust for FHSA business are properly considered and addressed. The reporting standard, which applies to providers across all three industries, collects specific prudentially relevant information on FHSAs.

Life companies or ADIs that wish to provide FHSAs need to notify APRA of their intention to do so prior to providing, or offering to provide, a FHSA. APRA prudential standards that already apply to the operations of life companies and ADIs are adequate for the provision of FHSAs.

Print This Post Print This Post

Posted 31st July 2008 by David Jacobson in Financial Services