media release (24-029MR)

ASIC issues infringement notice to Melbourne Securities for greenwashing

Published

Melbourne Securities Corporation Limited (Melbourne Securities) has paid $13,320 to comply with an infringement notice issued by ASIC in which ASIC alleged it made misleading statements regarding its Bloom Climate Impact Fund (Bloom Fund).

From March 2022 to June 2023, Melbourne Securities, as trustee and responsible entity of the Bloom Fund, made statements in the Fund’s Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) that said the Fund would seek to avoid the investment of the Fund’s assets in a range of excluded activities, including in fossil fuels.

Despite this, the Bloom Fund used revenue thresholds which allowed it to invest in companies that derived up to 33% revenue from excluded activities, such as fossil fuels. ASIC contends these revenue thresholds were not disclosed to investors and were contrary to the statements in the PDS.

ASIC believes that applying a negative screening process which allows a company to derive up to 33% of its revenue from an excluded activity is not seeking to avoid investments in those activities.

ASIC alleges that as a result of the application of revenue thresholds, the Bloom Fund acquired and held a direct investment in General Electric Co which derived 16% of its revenue from fossil fuels in the 2022 financial year.

General Electric represented 0.96% of funds under management when acquired in March 2022. It was divested in May 2023.

Payment of an infringement notice is not an admission of guilt or liability.

The specific reasons for ASIC’s concerns are set out in the infringement notices which have been published on the Infringement notices register

Background 

The Bloom Fund was registered on 15 February 2022 and was terminated on 8 June 2023. As at the date of its termination, the Fund had approximately $1.7m in funds under management. 

As part of ASIC’s Sustainable Finance enforcement priority, ASIC has issued 16 other infringement notices in relation to alleged ESG misconduct:   

  • two against Morningstar (23-324MR)
  • Future Super (23-110MR
  • three against Black Mountain Energy (23-001MR)
  • Diversa Trustees Limited (22-379MR
  • three against Vanguard Investments Australia (22-336MR)
  • four against TIou Energy Limited (22-294MR)
  • two against Northern Trust Asset Management (23-344MR)

ASIC currently has three greenwashing-related civil penalty actions before the Federal Court against Mercer Super (23-043MR), Vanguard Investments Australia (23-196MR) and Active Super (23-215MR).  

ASIC’s Information Sheet 271 How to avoid greenwashing when offering or promoting sustainability-related products (INFO 271) provides information for responsible entities of managed funds and super fund trustees about how to avoid greenwashing when offering or promoting sustainability-related or ethical products and investments. 

Media enquiries: Contact ASIC Media Unit