ASIC Wins $7M Penalty Against Cigno Australia and BSF Solutions for Credit Act Breaches
Summary
The Federal Court of Australia ordered Cigno Australia ($3M), its director Mark Swanepoel ($500K), BSF Solutions ($3M), and its director Brenton Harrison ($500K) to pay a combined $7 million penalty for engaging in credit activity without an Australian Credit Licence and charging prohibited fees. The Court found the No Upfront Charge Loan Model denied consumers protections under the Credit Act including limits on fees and charges. From July 2022 to May 2024, the companies charged consumers over $90 million in fees.
What changed
The Federal Court ordered $7 million in civil penalties against Cigno Australia, BSF Solutions, and their respective directors for Credit Act breaches. The Court found the defendants engaged in credit activity without holding an Australian Credit Licence and charged consumers prohibited fees through their No Upfront Charge Loan Model. The model was designed to circumvent consumer protections including fee and charge limits. \n\nAffected parties include licensed credit providers who must ensure compliance with Australian Credit Licence requirements, and consumers who may have been charged prohibited fees. Financial services companies operating alternative lending models should review their fee structures to ensure compliance with the Credit Act. The penalties follow exhausted appeals through the Full Federal Court and High Court, establishing final enforcement of the judgment.
Penalties
$7,000,000 combined: Cigno Australia $3,000,000; BSF Solutions $3,000,000; Mark Swanepoel $500,000; Brenton Harrison $500,000
Archived snapshot
Apr 17, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Print Share The Federal Court has ordered Cigno Australia and its director Mark Swanepoel and BSF Solutions and its director Brenton Harrison to pay a combined penalty of $7 million for engaging in credit activity without a licence and charging prohibited fees.
Cigno Australia was ordered to pay $3 million, its director Mr Swanepoel $500,000, BSF Solutions $3 million, and its director Mr Harrison $500,000.
The penalty orders follow the findings of the Federal Court on 24 May 2024 of breaches of the Credit Act by Cigno Australia and BSF Solutions through their use of the No Upfront Charge Loan Model and involvement in those breaches by Mr Swanepoel and Mr Harrison (24-111MR).
ASIC Chair Joe Longo said, ‘ASIC has taken regulatory and enforcement action over many years to respond to various business models used by entities connected to Cigno Australia, BSF Solutions, Mr Swanepoel and Mr Harrison. ASIC believes their No Upfront Charge Loan Model was designed to sidestep consumer protections laws and put consumers at risk.
‘From July 2022 to May 2024, Cigno Australia and BSF Solutions charged consumers more than $90 million in fees.
'Today’s outcome demonstrates ASIC’s commitment to protecting Australians from predatory lending practices and holding individuals and companies accountable for their actions.’
In delivering his judgment, Justice Jackman said, ’ASIC submits, and I accept, that the respondents’ decision to operate that model denied consumers important protections under the Credit Act and Credit Code. In relation to the No Upfront Charge Loan Model, those protections included limits on the fees and charges that can be imposed for the provision of credit.’
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Background
On 3 October 2023, ASIC began civil penalty proceedings in the Federal Court against Cigno Australia, Mr Swanepoel, BSF Solutions and Mr Harrison for allegedly providing credit without an Australian Credit Licence (23-266MR).
On 24 May 2024, the Federal Court found Cigno Australia and BSF Solutions engaged in credit activity without a licence and charged consumers prohibited fees. The Court also found that Mr Swanepoel and Mr Harrison were involved in the unlicensed activity and other Credit Act breaches (24-111MR).
On 11 June 2024, Cigno Australia, BSF Solutions, Mr Swanepoel and Mr Harrison filed an appeal against the Federal Court’s decision and on 10 July 2025, the Full Federal Court unanimously dismissed the appeal (25-131MR).
On 6 November 2025, the High Court dismissed an application for special leave to appeal by Mr Swanepoel and Mr Harrison (25-268MR).
ASIC has also previously taken action against Cigno Pty Ltd and BHF Solutions Pty Ltd, companies related to the above defendants, who operated a ‘Continuing Credit Model’ between October 2019 and March 2020.
In June 2022, the Full Federal Court found that the ‘Continuing Credit Model’ was unlawful and that these parties had engaged in credit activities without holding an Australian Credit Licence. In July 2023, on remittal, the Federal Court granted declarations and injunctions against Cigno and BHF (22-158MR).
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