Financial Markets Authority (New Zealand)
Agency overview | |
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Formed | 1 May 2011 |
Preceding agency | |
Jurisdiction | New Zealand |
Headquarters | Wellington, New Zealand |
Agency executives |
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Website | www |
The Financial Markets Authority (FMA) is the New Zealand government agency responsible for financial regulation. It is responsible for regulating all financial market participants, exchanges and the setting and enforcing of financial regulations.
History
The authority was established on 1 May 2011 as part of the Financial Markets (Regulators and KiwiSaver) Bill which was passed by the New Zealand parliament on the 7 April 2011. It was established in a wake of criticism over the failure of the previous regulatory regime to halt the failure of a large number of finance companies and to stem investor losses in the period between 2006 and 2010. It was introduced by Commerce Minister Simon Power as a "super regulator" whose purpose was to restore investor confidence battered by the finance company meltdown and global financial crisis. "This move is at the centre of the Government's drive to restore the confidence of mum and dad investors in our financial markets," he said.[1]
The Authority took over the functions of the Securities Commission of New Zealand and Government Actuary which were disestablished, and consolidates other regulatory functions which were fragmented across the Ministry of Economic Development (New Zealand) the Companies Office and its National Enforcement Unit.[2]
Structure
The FMA is controlled by a board appointed by the Minister of Commerce and run by chief executive Rob Everett. The board comprises chairman Mark Todd and members Ainsley McLaren, Christopher Swasbrook, Elizabeth Longworth, Prasanna Gai, Vanessa Stoddart, and Sue Chetwin[3]
Priorities
The FMA's official website says its key statutory objective is "to promote and facilitate the development of fair, efficient, and transparent financial markets" and that it "will use the full range of its enforcement powers, targeting conduct that presents the greatest likelihood of harm to the function of open, transparent and efficient capital markets."[4] Since it was established in 2011, it has been involved in legal action against Bridgecorp, KA Trustee Ltd, Perpetual, Hanover Finance, Lombard Finance, Sean Wood, Nathans Finance, Bernard Whimp and David Ross.[5]
See also
References
- ^ "New Financial Watchdog to Be Up and Running in Three Weeks". Financial Markets Authority. 7 April 2011.
- ^ "Governance - Our Board". Financial Markets Authority. fma.govt.nz. 8 January 2020.
- ^ https://www.fma.govt.nz/about-us/governance/
- ^ FMA Enforcement Policy, FMA website
- ^ FMA Court Decisions, FMA Official website