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Outsourcing Arrangements. John Sudano, Senior Associate Hall & Wilcox, Lawyers. Outsourcing Prudential Standard (SPS 231). Came into full force from 1 July 2013 Applies to outsourcing of material business functions Outsourcing is common in the superannuation industry
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Outsourcing Arrangements John Sudano, Senior Associate Hall & Wilcox, Lawyers
Outsourcing Prudential Standard (SPS 231) • Came into full force from 1 July 2013 • Applies to outsourcing of material business functions • Outsourcing is common in the superannuation industry • SPS 231 deals with requirements a trustee must satisfy before and after entering into an outsourcing agreement
Material outsourcing • In a nutshell, a business activity is ‘material’ if it has the potential to have a significant impact on the trustee’s business operations, the interests or reasonable expectations of beneficiaries etc if disrupted • Typically: • Administration agreements • Insurance administration agreements • Investment management agreements • Custodial agreements • Promoter agreements • APRA envisages that where uncertain whether an agreement involves outsourcing a material business activity trustees should treat the business activity as material.
Drafting tips and traps • Comparing old requirements and new requirements [main differences are in italics below] • Use a checklist of content requirements in SPS 231 and complete when you review an agreement and send to proposed service provider with recommended changes
Drafting tips and traps • Agreement must be signed by all parties before the arrangement commences • State scope and services to be provided - clearly describe the deliverables and related service standards • Start and end dates • Default arrangements and termination provisions – consider notice period and transitioning • Dispute resolution arrangements – ensure arrangement is certain
Drafting tips and traps • Liability and indemnity provisions – limit to trust property and service provider is liable for subcontractors • Insurance - for example whether the service provider has adequate professional indemnity insurance • Confidentiality, privacy and security of information • Content and frequency of reports to be provided by the service provider– regular reporting to the trustee should be required given requirement to manage outsourcing relationships
Drafting tips and traps • Pricing and fee structures • Audit and monitoring procedures, service level and performance requirements and review provisions – trustee and auditors to have ability to inspect and access all documents relating to the agreement. Include service standards for each deliverable • Business continuity management – trustee should be able to request a copy of the service provider’s BCP and should be given a copy of the report of the annual BCP test conducted by the service provider
Drafting tips and traps • Address the form in which data is to be kept, identify ownership and control of data – where relevant, provide for the return of fund data to the trustee • Address subcontracting and require the service provider to accept responsibility for the actions of any subcontractor • Allow APRA access to documentation and information related to the outsourcing arrangement • Service provider must cooperate with APRA’s requests for info and assistance and the agreement must provide the right to conduct on-site visits
Drafting tips and traps • It is advisable although not critical to include a clause where a service provider agrees to not disclose or advertise that APRA has conducted an on-site visit • Provide for any outsourcing to an offshore provider (including through a sub-contractor) if relevant – it is suggested that the service provider be required to obtain the trustee’s prior approval before subcontracting offshore
Insurance arrangements • Insurance policies themselves are not outsourcing arrangements • Service level agreement related to services provided by insurers in making insured benefits available may be material outsourcing arrangements • There are therefore times insurance arrangements must comply with both SPS 250 and SPS 231.
Privacy clauses • Australian Privacy Principles (APPs) not the old National Privacy Principles. • It is critical that where any personal information is to be disclosed offshore the offshore party is required to comply with the APPs in handling the personal information.
Disclaimer • Information in this presentation is current as at 8 October 2014. • This presentation includes information about drafting outsourcing agreements. It is not, however, to be used or relied upon as a substitute for professional advice. Before acting on any matter in the area, you should discuss matters with a professional adviser.