Dover, McMaster hit with $1.4m penaltyBY KARREN VERGARA | FRIDAY, 5 MAR 2021 12:42PMIn a win for ASIC this morning, Dover Financial Advisers and its founder Terry McMaster have been ordered to pay over $1.4 million in penalties by the Federal Court of Australia. Related News |
Editor's Choice
Frontier awards custody mandate for ICIO offering
Frontier Advisors has awarded a custody and administration mandate for its independent chief investment officer offering to the Australian market.
Alexander Funds names new chief executive
Alexander Funds has named a new chief executive, hiring from Australian Unity and set to take on the role September 7.
Soul Patts to pocket $1.89bn from Brickworks divestment
Washington H. Soul Pattinson & Co is set to receive $1.89 billion after agreeing to divest its stake in Brickworks' industrial joint venture property trusts to Goodman Group, freeing up capital for future investment opportunities.
ASIC expands list of super lead generation entities
ASIC has names 19 additional entities involved in superannuation lead generation activities as part of an ongoing review into business models that may encourage consumers to switch super funds unnecessarily or inappropriately.
Products
Featured Profile

Brian Redican
CHIEF ECONOMIST
NEW SOUTH WALES TREASURY CORPORATION
NEW SOUTH WALES TREASURY CORPORATION
What makes an economist an economist? TCorp chief economist Brian Redican reflects on over three decades of navigating Australia's economic cycles. Riddhima Talwani writes.







Ridiculous! Culpable or not, these people - and their former 400 advisers - were not, and are not, criminals. In typical gung-ho ASIC mentality, technical breaches are treated as sins against humanity.
As a retired financial adviser with 50+years in practice, I would stake my pension on the fact that more good was delivered to the Clients of the 400 advisers than was anything resembling dis-service. But ASIC couldn't care less about the thousands of Clients who were deprived of their Adviser immediately approaching Financial Year-end at the time they stopped Dover trading. Not even a consideration.
Financial Planning is about caring for the security and well-being of everyday Australians. The question as to whether the Advisers were doing so in utmost good faith was clearly never a consideration of ASIC. And sadly, and tragically, still isn't.