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Home News

More court action possible as ASIC seeks to test trustee obligations

ASIC’s lawsuit against Equity Trustees aims to establish trustee diligence requirements, with chair Joe Longo telling a parliamentary committee that “they’ve never been tested”.

by Keith Ford
September 18, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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The Shield Master Fund and First Guardian Master Fund scandals have, based on the latest numbers from the corporate regulator, impacted around 11,000 consumers with approximately $1.1 billion of funds invested.

However, this number could be set to soar, with Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) chair Joe Longo telling a parliamentary joint committee hearing into ASIC oversight that more funds are under investigation.

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“I regret to inform the committee that it’s even more than that, because there’s a range of funds that we’re looking at, a range of investigations we’re looking at, and the number of investors that have been affected by this conduct, I would have thought, is closer to 25 or 30 thousand,” Longo said on Thursday.

Given the broadening scope of the already massive investor impact, it is unsurprising that the corporate regulator aims to establish clear boundaries for super fund trustee due diligence requirements when adding funds to their platforms.

Deputy chair Sarah Court said that, in ASIC’s view, trustees owe members a “range of duties”.

“We are of the view that the trustees may have failed in those duties,” Court said.

“We’ve taken court proceedings in the last few weeks against one of those trustees, Equity Trustees, and we are alleging that it has breached the duties that it owed as a superannuation trustee to those people that were able to invest through its platform or the platform it made accessible.

“That matter is before the court and being defended, but we are of the view that the trustees have an obligation to protect the members’ funds and act in the members’ best interests.”

The proceedings against Equity Trustees, which ASIC launched late last month, relate specifically to its inclusion of Shield on super platforms it hosted.

Longo explained that while the obligations on trustees are all established in legislation, “they’ve never been tested”.

“In the proceedings that we’ve already commenced, and there may well be more proceedings coming, we’re testing the standards of diligence that the superannuation trustee has to discharge before putting anything on their platform,” the chair said.

“The trustee can’t be putting products there that aren’t suitable.”

ASIC executive director of enforcement, Chris Savundra, told the committee that the regulator’s concerns, as far as they relate to super trustees, are not related to the misappropriation or misuse of investor funds alleged against Shield and First Guardian’s responsible entities, but the lack of adequate risk assessment.

“What we say is these funds had no track record, the individuals had no track records, so they were high-risk,” Savundra said.

“The assets were illiquid, high-risk. So looking at it through that risk lens, the assessment should have been done.

“I don’t believe trustees were not putting Shield or First Guardian on their platform because they were aware that investor funds were being misused or misappropriated, and to my knowledge, no trustee raised those concerns with us. Those were ascertained through our investigative work.”

In his opening address, Longo signalled that the focus of ASIC’s work would transition from “preserving assets for the benefit of investors” to “holding key players to account”.

“Our investigations into these high-risk super investment matters are complex and ongoing,” he said.

“They include numerous lines of inquiry and a large number of entities and individuals, including lead generators, financial advisers, advice licensees, superannuation trustees, the research house, auditors and the managed investment schemes.”

Court also noted that the different segments of the chain involved in the collapse are all blaming each other.

“We are certainly investigating at least one of the ratings houses that we are concerned had the Shield Master Fund rated as of investment grade or words to that effect, and indeed, one of the challenges with these matters is that in a sense, everyone is pointing fingers at everyone else,” she said.

“For example, the financial advisers are saying to us, ‘Well look, you can’t hold us accountable for this ASIC, because the ratings house had rated these funds, or at least the Shield Master Fund, as of investment grade.’ Super fund trustees are telling us the same thing, saying, ‘Well we relied on the ratings houses’ or ‘We relied on the fact that these members had financial advice.’

“So one of the challenges here is trying to pull all of this apart and work out where does liability lie. Our own view is that significant failures and likely contraventions of the law, certainly ones that we are proposing to take forward, in every link of this long chain.”

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