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Mercer Super hit with $10.3 million Federal Court penalties

Mike Taylor

Mike Taylor

Managing Editor and Publisher

29 June 2026
ASIC sues Binance for consumer protection failures

Mercer Super has been ordered to pay penalties totalling $10.3 million for systemic failures to report investigations into significant member services issues following Federal Court action initiated by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC).

The regulator revealed the Federal Court outcome today, noting that the charges included an investigation into insurance premiums continuing to be charged after members had died, and only refunded later.

It said the Court found that between October 2021 and September 2024, Mercer Super’s systems for complying with the Corporations Act’s reportable situations regime were inadequate.

The regime requires Australian financial services licensees to promptly notify ASIC of investigations into potentially significant breaches of their core obligations.

The Court also found that Mercer Super failed to report seven reportable investigations to ASIC at all and it reported another investigation late. In relation to the investigation that was reported late to ASIC, the Court found that Mercer Super failed to take all reasonable steps to ensure the reports to ASIC were accurate and provided false or misleading information which understated the number of members impacted by the incident being investigated.

The investigations that Mercer Super either failed to report on time or did not report at all included investigations concerning:

  • failure to update member accounts which led to higher fees and less favourable insurance policies applying to members
  • failure to allocate $64 million in member funds in a timely manner, and
  • failure to provide death and total and permanent disability insurance cover for eligible members.

ASIC Chair Sarah Court said the systemic deficiencies and conduct identified were inappropriate for a superannuation trustee of Mercer Super’s size and market position.

“These failures undermined a critical safeguard designed to protect consumers and exposed fundamental weaknesses in Mercer Super’s systems and processes.

“This was not an isolated oversight. It was a sustained systemic issue that continued for years after the regime was introduced, which is unacceptable for a fund entrusted with $80 billion worth of retirement savings for more than a million members.

“When investigations into serious member service issues are not reported to ASIC as required by law, this can allow problems impacting members to persist unchecked, increasing the risk of ongoing harm,” Court said.

‘The Court’s decision sends a strong message to the superannuation sector that accurate and timely reporting is not optional and when a fund falls short, we will take action.’

In handing down the decision, her Honour Justice Button found that ASIC’s supervisory role had been seriously compromised given the duration of the investigations that Mercer Super failed to report.

Her Honour also found that Mercer Super was on notice that its compliance systems were not adequate and of the risk that investigations were not being identified and reported to ASIC as required.

In a statement issued in the wake of the judgement, Mercer Super said it acknowledges and apologises that it fell short of its obligations under the reportable situations regime.

“The agreed facts submitted to the Federal Court shows these shortcomings were not deliberate and that Mercer Super did not financially benefit from them. There is no allegation of financial or non-financial loss to members in relation to this matter.

“To address the issue, we have made important investments across Mercer Super, putting in place additional personnel, and improving our processes, systems, and technology,” the company said.

“The penalty will be paid by Mercer and not by the super fund or its members.”

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