ASIC commenced high-profile civil penalty proceedings against
Interprac Financial Planning Pty Ltd in November 2025.
For AFSL holders, this case is a critical regulatory signal:
manual, episodic, or "symbolic" compliance is no longer sufficient
to meet your s912A obligations in a data-driven world.
The Core Failures: Why Interprac Is a Case Study
ASIC alleges that Interprac failed to oversee authorised representatives who funneled
approximately $677 million of client superannuation into two high-risk
funds — Shield and First Guardian — that subsequently collapsed. The "warning" lies in
how these failures happened:
Failure 1
"Set and Forget" Automated Approvals
Interprac allegedly had an "auto-inclusion" criterion for its Approved Product List (APL):
if a fund received a certain star rating from an external research house (e.g. SQM Research),
it was automatically added. ASIC argues that relying solely on external ratings without
independent due diligence is a breach of licensee duties.
Failure 2
The "Template" Trap
When clients complained, Interprac allegedly issued template responses that
failed to investigate whether the advice was actually appropriate. In the age of AI, this is
a direct warning against using LLMs or automated tools to "rubber-stamp" compliance or
complaint handling.
Failure 3
Failure to Detect Patterns
ASIC alleges Interprac had the data — revenue spikes and unusual product flows — to see the
risk, but failed to use it. They missed red flags such as identical Statements of
Advice (SOAs) being issued to unrelated clients.
Strategic Lessons for AI Governance
Liberate Consulting views the Interprac case as the blueprint for what ASIC will look for
in your 2026 ADM Transparency audits:
Duties are Non-Delegable
You cannot "outsource" your responsibility to an algorithm or a third-party software
provider. If your AI makes a recommendation, you must be able to explain why
it was in the client's best interest.
Systems Must Scale
Manual compliance cannot keep up with the speed of AI. Interprac showed that
spreadsheet-based monitoring is "broken" because it cannot detect
systemic patterns before harm crystallises.
The "Enquiring Mind" Requirement
ASIC Deputy Chair Sarah Court stated that a licensee must be "alert and responsive."
For AI, this means having Human-in-the-Loop (HITL) protocols that
actually work — not just exist on paper.
The Outcome for Interprac
Ongoing · Federal CourtCase Status as of Early 2026
The case is ongoing in the Federal Court. ASIC is seeking civil penalties
and orders to restrain Interprac from carrying on a financial services business.
This "existential risk" is precisely why we prioritise Technical Readiness and GRC Pillars
in your strategy.
The Interprac case proves that ASIC now expects
"data-enabled" supervision. If you are using AI to generate advice or
screen products, you must have an equal and opposite AI-driven compliance system to monitor it.
— Lead Strategist, Liberate Consulting
Is Your Firm Exposed to an Interprac-Style Finding?
Liberate Consulting can undertake a Gap Analysis that compares your current APL and
complaint-handling processes against the specific failures identified in the Interprac case.