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Important information for customers with business or equipment finance contracts of $1,000,000 or less

Are you a business customer who has entered into, renewed or varied a business finance contract or equipment finance contract of $1,000,000 or less from 12 November 2016? If so, the changes below may apply to your contract.

What is changing and what does it mean for you?

We have a strong commitment to supporting businesses and improving the way we do things. With this in mind, we’re strengthening protections under some business finance contracts and equipment finance contracts, to make them more favourable for our business and equipment finance customers. This has been done in consultation with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission and the Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman.

 

The changes apply to business finance contracts and equipment finance contracts entered into, renewed or varied since 12 November 2016 (including renewals and extensions that occur automatically when you retain goods after the end of your equipment finance contract).

 

The changes take effect from 10 November 2017 for business finance contracts and from 22 December 2017 for equipment finance contracts. This notice describes the changes.

 

This notice is in 3 parts:

Part A: changes affecting business finance contracts including specialised finance contracts
Part B: changes affecting only specialised finance contracts
Part C: changes affecting only equipment finance contracts
The meaning of terms printed like this is explained in the last tab below

Is there anything you need to do?

No – you’ll automatically receive the benefit of the changes described in this notice without the need for any update to your terms and conditions (so you won’t receive new terms).

 

We’re here to help

If you have any concerns or questions about your small business financing arrangements, please contact your Relationship Manager or call 132 142, Monday to Friday 8:00am – 8:00pm.

 

 

Changes affecting business finance contracts including specialised finance contracts.

What's changing?   

Entire agreement clauses We won’t rely on clauses that limit our agreement with you to the written finance contract. This means statements we make to you (in writing or otherwise) can form part of our agreement.
General indemnity clauses

If something goes wrong, we're limiting the kinds of loss we’ll ask you to cover.  We’ll:

  • only seek to recover losses that are a direct result of the matters covered by your general indemnity, and
  • not rely on the general indemnity to claim losses which arise from fraud, negligence or wilful misconduct of:
    • any of our or our related entities’ employees, contractors or agents
    • any receiver or receiver and manager we appoint when exercising our rights as a holder of a security
Unilateral variation clauses

We’ll reduce our reliance on unilateral variation clauses.  These are clauses that allow us to make changes to your finance contract at any time, without your agreement. Invoice finance contracts are an exception – see Part B for details.

 

Changes we can make

Sometimes we need to make changes for reasons outside our control (see below). We can also still make changes to financial terms such as margins, interest rates, payments, repayments, fees and charges (including introducing new ones), how we calculate financial terms and when we charge them. We need to be able to do this at any time in the normal course of our business.

We used to have broad rights to change other terms for any reason. However, we’ll now only make changes to your other terms if:

  • the change is for security reasons
  • we reasonably consider you’ll benefit from it
  • it’s administrative or minor, or corrects a mistake or omission
  • it reflects changes to our business or technological systems
  • it’s not specific to you but is reasonable and made generally to similar products, product features or customers – this may include changes to reflect current industry or market products or conditions.

When we make changes, we’ll always act fairly and reasonably towards you in a consistent and ethical manner.

 

Notice of changes

We’ll generally give you at least 30 days’ notice of changes. Exceptions are:

  • Changes that are out of our control. These are:
    • changes to interest rates which incorporate an external variable reference rate (we can’t give you prior notice of these because we don’t set the external variable rate)
    • changes to government charges that are published by the government (we won’t provide notice of these)
    • changes required to comply with law, a code of practice, a regulator’s requirements or guidance or decisions of courts or other dispute resolution processes (you’ll receive less than 30 days’ notice if the law requires this, or we consider an immediate change is required for security reasons or the change is covered elsewhere in this part and we’ve said you’ll get less than 30 days’ notice)
  • Changes to pricing. These include changes to interest rates and margins. You’ll get notice no later than the day the change takes effect unless:
    • the rate incorporates an external variable reference rate (we can’t give you prior notice of these because we don’t set the external variable rate)
    • the change is a margin change that’s only made to your terms and we consider it will be unfavourable to you at the time the change is made (you’ll get at least 30 days’ notice)
  • Changes made only to your terms. If a change is specific to you (other than the kinds of changes referred to above), you’ll get less than 30 days’ notice, or no notice, where its reasonable for us to manage a material and immediate risk.
Financial indicator covenants

We won’t require you to comply with any financial indicator covenants in your finance contract. Some examples of financial indicator covenants we won’t rely on include, maintaining a particular loan to security value ratio (LVR) or maintaining a particular interest cover ratio (ICR).

However, there are some exceptions for certain specialised finance contracts - see Part B for details.

What can trigger default

We’ll only require early repayment of facilities provided for an agreed term or take enforcement action against you if one or more of the following occurs (standard defaults). However, if you have a specialised finance contract, some additional defaults will apply – see Part B for details.

  • you or a guarantor don’t pay any amount payable under your finance contract within 2 business days after its due date
  • you or a guarantor don’t comply with the law or any requirement of an authority (unless the failure can be rectified and it’s rectified within 30 days after we ask you to do so or any longer period we agree)
  • any of the following happen to you or a guarantor:
    • you or a guarantor become insolvent
    • another creditor takes enforcement proceedings against you or a guarantor
  • you or a guarantor give us incorrect, incomplete or misleading information or make misleading or incorrect declarations or representations to us in connection with your finance contract or another arrangement with us and we consider this materially increases our security risk
  • you use your facility for a purpose which we haven’t approved unless:
    • the breach can be rectified and it’s rectified within 30 days after we ask you to do so or any longer period we agree, and
    • we consider that the breach could not result in us failing to comply with a law or any requirement of an authority
  • you or a guarantor are subject to a change in management (which we reasonably consider to be material) or a change in control (except, in each case, where the change can be rectified and it’s rectified within 30 days after we ask you to do so or any longer period we agree)
  • you don’t give us copies of your or a guarantor’s financial statements, accounts or other financial information in the form we reasonably require within 30 days of the date you are required to give them to us
  • you or a guarantor don’t maintain or comply with any licence which we reasonably consider is necessary to carry on your or the guarantor’s business (unless the failure can be rectified and it’s rectified within 30 days after we ask you to do so or any longer period we agree)
  • you or a guarantor don’t maintain the insurance we require (unless the failure can be rectified and it’s rectified within 30 days after we ask you to do so or any longer period we agree)
  • you or a guarantor don’t comply with an obligation not to create or allow another interest in, or dispose, or part with possession of, any property over which we have a security interest (or attempt to do so)
  • we:
    • call for early repayment of money owing under a separate financing arrangement you or a guarantor have with us; or
    • otherwise enforce a security interest we hold over your or a guarantor’s assets

because of an event of default (however described) under that arrangement (but only if the event of default is of a type that would be permitted if unfair contract terms laws applied to that arrangement)

Of course, if your current arrangements give you more time to rectify something than what is described above, we’ll ensure you’re given that extra time.

 

How does this notice affect “at call” facilities?

Some facilities such as overdrafts or lines of credit are repayable “at call” or “on demand” which means we can ask you to repay them at any time. Other arrangements, including an invoice finance contract, can be terminated at any time by providing the agreed period of notice. This will continue to be the case.

Bailment contracts are also “at call” facilities. Under a bailment contract we can do a number of things at any time, including ask for repayment, require you to return bailed goods or take possession of bailed goods and otherwise act to protect our interest in bailed goods. This will also continue to be the case.

If we’ve issued bank guarantees, letters of credit or similar instruments (or endorsed bills of exchange or similar) at your request, our rights in respect of those instruments, including rights to terminate our liability, stop issuing instruments or require reimbursement from you, are not affected by this notice.

 

How does this notice affect security documents?
If we need to enforce our rights under any securities (eg guarantees or mortgages) given to us for your finance contract, we’ll exercise our rights under those securities in a way that is consistent with our commitments described above. However, some securities may secure other arrangements we’ve entered into with you or your guarantors. Our rights under those other arrangements and corresponding supporting securities are not affected by this notice.