Service Bank Accounts 45% Payment Processors 35%
Specialism Customer Protection 65% Regulatory Reporting 60%
2026-03-16 12:13:13 · pthandapani@vixio.com
ID
2952282
GUID
bcd3b5eb413674fc9608fff51e945f5c

Classification

Service
Bank Accounts (45%)

The withdrawal of Regulatory Guide 40 on transaction fee disclosure for bank deposit and payments products touches on Bank Accounts regulation, but the update is primarily administrative and procedural rather than substantive regulatory change.

Payment Processors (35%)

The update mentions payment product providers and disclosure obligations, but lacks substantive payments regulation content and is largely about guidance simplification and administrative consolidation.

Specialism
Customer Protection (65%)

The withdrawal of Regulatory Guide 40 on transaction fee disclosure for payment products suggests a customer protection angle, though the update is primarily administrative and lacks substantive regulatory change.

Regulatory Reporting (60%)

Low confidence — requires human review. The update involves regulatory guidance simplification rather than new substantive rules, making it difficult to map to specific payment compliance specialisms.

Fair, strong and efficient financial system for all Australians.

Pipeline Progress

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TITLE: Australian Securities and Investments Commission Withdraws and Updates Regulatory Guidance BODY: On [date not specified], the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) withdrew and updated regulatory guides as part of its program to simplify financial regulation for industry. ASIC withdrew two outdated regulatory guides: Regulatory Guide 64 (Failure to lodge documents) and Regulatory Guide 40 (Good transaction fee disclosure for bank, building society and credit union deposit and payments products). The regulator also made minor and technical updates to Regulatory Guide 104 (AFS licensing: Meeting the general obligations) and Regulatory Guide 205 (Credit licensing: General conduct obligations). These updates maintain accuracy and clarity for industry participants. Regulatory Guide 64 outlined ASIC's approach to companies that failed to lodge certain documents and when ASIC would withdraw proceedings against a company secretary. Regulatory Guide 40 served as a reference guide for retail payment and deposit product providers and consumers on transaction fee disclosure. ASIC undertook targeted consultation with industry prior to withdrawing this guidance. Regulatory Guide 104 and Regulatory Guide 205 set out what ASIC assesses when determining how Australian financial services licensees and credit licensees meet their general obligations under the law. Following the withdrawal of these guides, companies can find information about their obligations to lodge company documents on ASIC's Company annual review webpage. Consumers seeking information about transaction accounts, credit cards, and other banking products can visit Moneysmart.gov.au. Retail payment and deposit product providers can refer to ASIC's regulatory resources on good disclosure practices, including Regulatory Guide 168 (Product Disclosure Statements: Disclosure and other obligations) and Regulatory Guide 221 (Facilitating digital financial services disclosures). REFERENCES: ASIC Newsroom: ASIC trims regulatory guidance to reduce complexity for industry
  • Scraped:2026-03-16 12:13:13
  • Created:2026-03-16 12:13:12
  • By:pthandapani@vixio.com (6)