Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) has proposed to remake a legislative instrument that exempts insurers and brokers from certain retail client obligations, specifically when incidental retail cover is provided in business insurance contracts.
The ASIC Corporations (Incidental Retail Cover) Instrument 2022/716, which exempts insurers and brokers from certain retail client obligations under Chapter 7 of the Corporations Act 2001, is scheduled to end on 16 August 2025.
‘Incidental retail cover’ refers to retail insurance cover provided to a business that forms a minor, incidental and inseparable part of an otherwise wholesale insurance product. For example, retail cover for the loss or damage of personal effects within wholesale business property insurance products that benefit a business’s employees.
ASIC had granted the relief to reduce regulatory burden and provide certainty for industry that the retail client obligations do not apply to what are, in fact, business insurance products. This prevents retail client compliance costs from being incurred and passed on to businesses.
ASIC has assessed that this instrument is generally operating effectively and efficiently and continues to form a necessary and useful part of the legislative framework. The Commission now proposes to remake the instrument for a period of five years and will continue to monitor its appropriateness considering ASIC’s regulatory experience and feedback from relevant stakeholders.
Under the Legislation Act 2003 (Cth) all legislative instruments are repealed automatically, or sunset, after 10 years, unless ASIC takes action to preserve them. The stakeholders can send their feedback to rri.consultation@asic.gov.au by 16 June 2025.
The relief provided through the instrument includes several conditions to ensure it is appropriately targeted and that the retail cover is genuinely incidental to and inseparable from the wholesale insurance product. For example, the instrument does not apply when the retail cover is offered at an optional expense, or when the business client must make a separate decision to purchase it.