Australia’s Securities Regulator to Probe ASX After Collapsed Blockchain Project
A panel of three experienced finance figures, led by Rob Whitfield, will conduct the inquiry and recommend fixes for any weaknesses found.

What to know:
- Australia's Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) has launched an inquiry into the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) to examine its governance, technical capability, and risk controls.
- A panel of three experienced finance figures, led by Rob Whitfield, will conduct the inquiry and recommend fixes for any weaknesses found.
- The inquiry was prompted by concerns about ASX's ability to run stable and secure market infrastructure.
Australia’s Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) has turned to three of the country’s most seasoned finance figures to probe the inner workings of the Australian Securities Exchange, including the exchange's doomed blockchain project.
ASIC launched the inquiry on June 16 over “ongoing concerns” it and the Reserve Bank of Australia expressed about the exchange’s ability to run stable and secure market plumbing.
Those concerns intensified when ASX scrapped a blockchain-based upgrade to its CHESS settlement engine in 2022, forcing a costly reset and drawing political heat. ASIC later sued ASX over making misleading statements on the project.
Rob Whitfield, a former Westpac chief risk officer and now a Commonwealth Bank director, will chair ASIC's panel. Joining him are Christine Holman, who sits on the boards of utility AGL and restaurant operator Collins Foods, and Guy Debelle, a Reserve Bank of Australia’s former deputy governor.
The trio will inspect ASX’s governance, technical capability, and risk controls and recommend fixes for any weak spots.
Their brief stretches across the entire ASX group, which handles more than A$6 billion ($3.92 billion) in trades each day.
Read more: Australia's Securities Regulator Sues ASX for Misleading Statements About Blockchain Project
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