Australian bank charges dead client service fee for a decade

Australian bank charges dead client service fee for a decade

A view of a Commonwealth Bank of Australia branch in Sydney, Australia, April 18, 2018. (Reuters photo)
A view of a Commonwealth Bank of Australia branch in Sydney, Australia, April 18, 2018. (Reuters photo)

MELBOURNE: An Australian government inquiry has heard that financial advisers working for Australia's largest bank continued charging clients service fees after they died -- in one case for more than a decade.

Documents presented Thursday to the inquiry into misbehaviour in Australia's financial sector showed the Commonwealth Bank had been receiving complaints from clients of being charged for services that had not been provided since 2002.

But the bank did not report the illegal behaviour to the industry regulator, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, until August 2014.

The bank's subsidiary, Count Financial, discovered a financial adviser knew his client had died in January 2004 but was still reaping 1,000 Australian dollars (24,357 baht) a year in service fees in late 2015.

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