tmmonline.nz  |   landlords.co.nz        About Good Returns  |  Advertise  |  Contact Us  |  Terms & Conditions  |  RSS Feeds

NZ's Financial Adviser News Centre

GR Logo
Last Article Uploaded: Friday, April 19th, 6:45PM

Investments

rss
Investment News

Non-bank deposit takers to come under new rules

Press Release: Companies that take deposits from members of the public, such as finance companies, will be subject to a new framework under changes announced by the Ministers of Finance and Commerce today.

Tuesday, June 19th 2007, 4:30PM
In future, all finance companies, building societies and credit unions, known as non-bank deposit takers (NBDTs), will be required to be licensed by the Reserve Bank.

"This role fits well with the Reserve Bank’s current prudential role in relation to banks," Finance Minister Dr Michael Cullen said.

NBDTs are a growing part of the financial sector. However, there has been concern that inexperienced investors may not be adequately aware of the risk profile of their investment. This was highlighted last year with the collapse of three finance companies, Commerce Minister Lianne Dalziel said.

To assist investors know the level of risk they are taking, NBDTs will be required to obtain and publicly disclose a credit rating. Cabinet will be considering options for minimising the costs of a ratings regime, particularly for smaller NBDTs.

In light of these changes, Cabinet has confirmed that credit unions will have the equivalent flexibility in borrowing, investing and raising capital as other NBDTs.

The Ministers confirmed that trustee companies will remain the frontline supervisor for NBDTs, and that the Reserve Bank will be prudential regulator.

"In designing these changes, we’ve acknowledged that trustees play an important role in the current supervision of NBDTs and that there are benefits to that model we don’t want to lose, such as the ability to work more closely with an NBDT and the tailored skills and expertise a trustee can bring to the role," Dalziel said.

Under the new regime, trustees will be responsible for establishing a trust deed for particular offers of securities, prescribing the financial, reporting and other covenants in the trust deed, enforcing trust deed covenants, and supervising and monitoring NBDTs. Trustees will be licensed by the Securities Commission.

« Rules for registering finance sector to net loan sharksReserve Bank welcomes decision on prudential regulation »

Special Offers

Commenting is closed

 

print

Printable version  

print

Email to a friend

Good Returns Investment Centre is brought to you by:

Subscribe Now

Keep up to date with the latest investment news
Subscribe to our newsletter today

Edison Investment Research
  • Tetragon Financial Group
    16 April 2024
    FY23 growth driven by idiosyncratic factors
    Tetragon Financial Group (Tetragon) posted a 6.4% net asset value (NAV) per share total return (TR) in US dollar terms in FY23. Tetragon’s returns...
  • abrdn Asian Income Fund
    15 April 2024
    All looking good in terms of income and growth
    abrdn Asian Income Fund (AAIF) recently posted an upbeat set of results. In FY23, the company outperformed its reference index (MSCI AC Asia Pacific ex...
  • Murray Income Trust
    15 April 2024
    Delivering income and capital growth
    Murray Income Trust (MUT) invests in high-quality, mainly UK-listed stocks. It has achieved both its dividend and capital growth objectives over the long...
© 2024 Edison Investment Research.

View more research papers »

Today's Best Bank Rates
Rabobank 5.25  
Based on a $50,000 deposit
More Rates »
About Us  |  Advertise  |  Contact Us  |  Terms & Conditions  |  Privacy Policy  |  RSS Feeds  |  Letters  |  Archive  |  Toolbox  |  Disclaimer
 
Site by Web Developer and eyelovedesign.com