Seven-Year Licence Ends: Regulation Moves From Suspension to Revocation
On May 20, 2026, theAFSlicence of Global Pacific Solutions Group Pty Ltd was formally revoked byASIC. This decision was not sudden. From the suspension penalty in 2022 to the complete revocation in 2026, the company’s regulatory history shows a full trajectory from suspension to revocation.
ASIC issued Media Release 26-106MR on May 26, 2026, confirming the revocation decision. Notably, the legal basis for this revocation was not the company’s previous compliance breaches, but the fact that it had ceased carrying on a financial services business. This regulatory escalation path from suspension to revocation has typical analytical value in Australian financial regulatory practice.
Underlying Causes of Non-Compliant Operations
Looking back at the company’s regulatory record, its compliance problems had already emerged in the early period of holding the licence. According to ASIC Media Release 23-063MR issued on March 15, 2023, the regulator found that the company had systemic deficiencies in its operations:
Financial services were not provided efficiently, honestly and fairly, breaching the core obligations of a licensed entity
Reasonable steps were not taken to ensure that its authorised representatives complied with financial services laws, reflecting the absence of internal control mechanisms
The company failed to maintain professional competence consistent with the scope of its licence, indicating that it lacked the qualification foundation for ongoing operation
The core of these issues pointed to the management conduct of the company’s sole director and secretary, Douglas Cecil Allen. Allen had held that role since January 22, 2019, and ASIC found that his conduct directly caused the company to fail to meet the basic obligations of a licensed entity.
ASIC Enforcement Trends and Industry Impact
The case of Global Pacific Solutions Group is not an isolated example. In recent years, ASIC has continued to increase its clean-up of non-compliant licensed entities. From an enforcement perspective, ASIC usually follows the following progressive regulatory path:
Review and assess the compliance status of licensed entities
Issue warnings or impose additional licence conditions on entities with problems
Apply suspension measures against serious violators, restricting their business activities
Carry out revocation procedures for entities that have ceased operating or are unable to restore compliance
In Global Pacific’s case, the regulatory measures went through a complete escalation process from suspension, effective March 15, 2022, to revocation, effective May 20, 2026. The company applied to theAATon April 6, 2022, for a review of the suspension decision, but voluntarily withdrew the application on February 6, 2023. It did not subsequently challenge the regulatory measures.
Comparative Analysis of Licence Management Measures
| Comparison Dimension | Suspension Measure, 2022 | Revocation Decision, 2026 | Explanation of Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Legal Basis | ASIC enforcement powers | Section 915B(3)(a) of the Corporations Act | Suspension was based on misconduct; revocation was based on the fact of business cessation |
| Triggering Cause | Non-compliant operation and management failure | Financial services business had ceased | Suspension is a punitive measure; revocation is a factual determination |
| Licence Status | Licence retained but business restricted | Licence completely cancelled | Suspension can be restored; revocation is a final decision |
| Company Response | Applied for AAT review and later withdrew | No public information currently shows that a review was requested | Its position on the revocation decision remains unclear |
| Effective Date | March 15, 2022 | May 20, 2026 | More than four years separated the two decisions |
Warning for Licensed Entities
This case carries multiple warnings for holders of Australian AFS licences. First, the core obligations of licensed entities include ensuring that financial services are provided efficiently, honestly and fairly. Failure to meet this obligation may result in severe regulatory penalties. Second, once business is suspended or restricted, restoring compliance and resuming operations can be extremely difficult. The Global Pacific case shows that, in practice, the path from suspension to eventual revocation can be highly predictable. Finally, when ASIC determines that a licensed entity has ceased carrying on a financial services business, it may directly revoke the licence under section 915B(3)(a) of theCorporations Actwithout needing misconduct as a prerequisite.
Information sources: ASIC Media Release 26-106MR, May 26, 2026; ASIC Media Release 23-063MR, March 15, 2023; FX News Group industry report, May 26, 2026.
Australian Financial Services Licence Regulation FAQ
What is an AFS licence, and which entities need to hold it?
An AFS, or Australian Financial Services, licence is a statutory operating licence issued by ASIC under theCorporations Act. Entities that provide financial product advice, dealing, market making, custody, or related services in Australia are required to hold a valid AFS licence. Operating without a licence is unlawful.
Under what circumstances would ASIC revoke rather than suspend an AFS licence?
Revocation usually applies in situations where the licensed entity has ceased carrying on a financial services business, entered liquidation, failed to meet ongoing licence conditions, or is assessed as no longer suitable to hold a licence. Suspension is more commonly used for compliance problems that may still be corrected but require immediate restriction. The two differ fundamentally in legal nature: suspension is a temporary restrictive measure, while revocation is a final decision.
After an AFS licence is revoked, how are the former licensee’s client interests protected?
After the licence is revoked, the former licensee must immediately stop all financial services activities. For existing clients, business transfer or liquidation arrangements are usually required in accordance with ASIC’s requirements to ensure the safety of client assets and continuity of client rights. Clients may also seek dispute resolution through the Australian Financial Complaints Authority, or AFCA.
During the process from suspension to revocation, how long is the remediation window usually given by the regulator?
There is no fixed remediation period. It depends on the seriousness of the breach and the entity’s level of cooperation. In Global Pacific’s case, more than four years passed between the suspension order taking effect in March 2022 and the formal revocation in May 2026. However, the trigger for the final revocation was not failed remediation, but the fact that the company had actually ceased operations. Therefore, the factual determination standard under section 915B(3)(a) of theCorporations Actplayed a decisive role in this case.





