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Finder.com’s subsidiary sued for unlicensed conduct

Oksana Patron

Oksana Patron

15 December 2022
Federal Court of Australia

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has commenced civil penalty proceedings against Finder Wallet, a subsidiary of comparison website Finder.com, for allegedly providing unlicensed financial services, breaching product disclosure requirements and failing to comply with design and distribution obligations (DDO) in relation to its crypto-asset related product Finder Earn.

According to the regulator, Finder Wallet offered Finder Earn between late February and 10 November 2022, where Finder Earn customers deposited Australian dollars into their accounts, which were then converted to an Australian dollar-denominated ‘stablecoin’ called TAUD and allocated to Finder Wallet to use for its own working capital.

Following this, Finder Wallet paid customers (in Australian dollars) an annual compounding return of either 4.01% or, in some circumstances, 6.01%, in exchange for the use of their funds by Finder Wallet.

ASIC alleged that the Finder Earn product was, in substance, a debenture because customers deposited money with Finder Wallet on the understanding that their money would ultimately be repaid, together with a return for allowing Finder Wallet to use their capital.

ASIC also alleged that Finder Wallet required an Australian financial services (AFS) licence to offer Finder Earn, because it was providing financial product advice or dealing in a financial product, and that offering Finder Earn without a licence exposed consumers to potential harm, including the possibility that they were offered a product that was not suitable for them.

ASIC Deputy Chair Sarah Court said, this was its third recent action against a firm offering a crypto-asset related product that we consider to be a financial product.

“Our message to industry is clear – just because an offer involves a crypto-asset related product does not guarantee it will fall outside the current regulatory regime,” Court warned.

Further to that, Court said that because Finder Earn appeared to be a financial product, Finder Wallet had a requirement to comply with disclosure and DDO obligations to protect consumers.

“Issuers of financial products such as debentures must issue appropriate risk disclosure documents and develop appropriate target market determinations to ensure that consumers are not sold inappropriate products. We allege that Finder Wallet failed to do this, potentially putting their customers at risk of harm,” Court concluded.

After ASIC notified Finder Wallet of its concerns, Finder Wallet ceased offering Finder Earn from 24 November 2022 and all funds were returned in full to customers.

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