Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Bit Trade Pty Ltd
[2024] FCA 1422
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2024-12-12
Before
Mr J, Nicholas J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (17 paragraphs)
- Pursuant to s 1317G(1) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) ("the Act"), within 60 days the defendant pay to the Commonwealth a pecuniary penalty in the amount of $8,000,000 in respect of the defendant's contraventions of s 994B(2) of the Act the subject of the declaration made on 30 August 2024.
- The defendant pay the plaintiff's costs of the proceeding. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
INTRODUCTION 1 In this proceeding the plaintiff ("ASIC") alleged that the defendant ("Bit Trade") contravened s 994B(2) of the design and distribution obligations ("DDO") in Part 7.8A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) ("the Act") by issuing, granting or making available a financial product known as "Margin Extension" ("the Product") used by Bit Trade customers to purchase certain digital assets (including cryptoassets) on the digital asset exchange known as "Kraken" operated by Payward Inc ("Payward"). The relevant provisions of the DDO regime came into force on 5 October 2021. 2 On 23 August 2024 I published reasons for judgment finding Bit Trade liable: Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Bit Trade Pty Ltd [2024] FCA 953 ("J"). On 30 August 2024 I made a declaration in terms agreed between ASIC and Bit Trade: The defendant contravened s 994B(2) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) each time it first issued, granted or made available the Product to a person on or after 5 October 2021 without first making a target market determination. 3 The question to be determined is what pecuniary penalty Bit Trade should be ordered to pay in respect of its contraventions. ASIC says that $20 million is an appropriate penalty. Bit Trade accepts that a pecuniary penalty should be imposed, but says that it should not exceed $4 million. 4 The DDO regime is intended to help consumers obtain appropriate financial products by requiring issuers and distributors to take a "customer-centric approach" to the design, marketing and distribution of financial products: Revised Explanatory Memorandum to the Treasury Laws Amendment (Design and Distribution Obligations and Product Intervention Powers) Bill 2019 (Cth) at para 1.5. Paragraphs 1.2-1.7 of the Revised Explanatory Memorandum relevantly state: Context of amendments 1.2 The Corporations Act relies heavily on disclosure to assist consumers [to] understand and select appropriate financial products. However, disclosure can be ineffective for a number of reasons, including consumer disengagement, complexity of documents and products, behavioural biases, misaligned interests and low financial literacy. The availability of financial advice may not be sufficient to overcome these issues. A consumer may not seek financial advice or may receive poor-quality advice. 1.3 The Financial System Inquiry recognised these shortcomings of the existing disclosure regime. In response, it recommended the introduction of a targeted and principles-based product design and distribution obligation … … 1.5 These obligations are designed to assist consumers to obtain appropriate financial products by requiring issuers and distributors to have a customer-centric approach to designing, marketing and distributing financial products. … Summary of new law 1.7 Schedule 1 to the Bill amends the Corporations Act to introduce design and distribution obligations in relation to financial products. These new obligations improve consumer outcomes by ensuring that financial services providers have a customer-centric approach to making initial offerings of products to consumers. (Footnotes omitted) 5 The DDO regime requires the issuer of a relevant financial product to make an appropriate target market determination ("TMD") which must (inter alia) describe the class of retail clients within the target market for the product and specify any conditions and restrictions on the distribution of the product to retail clients. The issuer is also required to take reasonable steps to ensure that the distribution of the product is consistent with the TMD and to notify ASIC of any significant dealings in the product that are not consistent with the TMD.