
Privacy Statement
Parc Capital Investments Pty Ltd
Company:
Parc Capital Investments Pty Ltd
ACN:
646 356 229
AFSL:
532643
Date Updated:
February 2022
VERSION CONTROL
Version Number | Date Updated | Notes |
---|---|---|
1 | February 2022 | Original document prepared and finalised in consultation with Sophie Grace Pty Ltd. |
SECTION A – INTRODUCTION
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1 The information in this document details how we, Parc Capital Investments Pty Ltd (“Parc Capital Investments”) and its related body corporates, comply with the requirements of the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) (“Privacy Act”) and the Australian Privacy Principles in protecting the personal information we hold about you.
1.2 Personal information is any information or opinion about you that is capable, or reasonably capable, of identifying you, whether the information or opinion is true or not and is recorded in material form or not.
1.3 Sensitive information includes such things as your racial or ethnic origin, political opinions or membership of political associations, religious or philosophical beliefs, membership of a professional or trade association or trade union, sexual orientation or criminal record, that is also personal Your health, genetic and biometric information and biometric templates are also sensitive information. We also use the information we hold to help detect and prevent illegal activity. We cooperate with police and other enforcement bodies as required or allowed by law.
1.4 We protect your personal and sensitive information in accordance with the Australian Privacy Principles and the Privacy Act.
1.5 We collect personal and/or sensitive information to provide you with the products and services you request as well as information on other products and services offered by or through us. The law requires us to collect personal and/or sensitive information.
1.6 Your personal and/or sensitive information may be used by us to administer our products and services, for prudential and risk management purposes and, unless you tell us otherwise, to provide you with related marketing information. We also use the information we hold to help detect and prevent illegal activity. We cooperate with police and other enforcement bodies as required or allowed by law.
1.7 We disclose relevant personal information to external organisations that help us provide services. These organisations are bound by confidentiality arrangements. They may include overseas organisations.
1.8 You can seek access to the personal information we hold about you. If the information we hold about you is inaccurate, incomplete, or outdated, please inform us so that we can correct it. If we deny access to your personal information, we will let you know why. For example, we may give an explanation of a commercially sensitive decision, or give you access to the information through a mutually agreed intermediary, rather than direct access to evaluative information connected with it.
SECTION B – COLLECTION OF PERSONAL INFORMATION
2. Why we collect information
(a) providing customers with the products and services they request and, unless they tell us otherwise, to provide information on products and services offered by us and external product and service providers for whom we act as agent. (If you have provided us with your email or mobile phone details, we may provide information to you electronically with respect to those products and services);
(b) complying with our legal obligations;
(c) monitoring and evaluating products and services;
(d) gathering and aggregating information for statistical, prudential, actuarial and research purpose;
(e) assisting customers with queries; and
(f) taking measures to detect and prevent frauds.
3. Information we may collect
3.1The personal and sensitive information we collect generally consists of name, address, date of birth, occupation, account details, contact details (including telephone, facsimile and e-mail) and financial information.
3.2We are required by law to identify you if you are opening a new account or adding a new signatory to an existing account. Anti-money laundering laws require us to sight and record details of certain documents (i.e. photographic and non-photographic documents) in order to meet the standards set under those laws.
3.3Where it is necessary to do so, we also collect information on individuals such as:
(a) trustees;
(b) partners;
(c) company directors and officers;
(d) officers of co-operatives and associations;
(e) customer’s agents;
(f) beneficial owners of a client; and
(g) persons dealing with us on a “one-off” basis.
4. How we collect the information
5. Information collected from someone else
5.1 If it is impracticable or unreasonable for us to collect the personal information directly from you, we may collect such information from agents, or from your family members or friends. If you are not aware that we have collected the personal information, we will notify you of collection and the circumstances of collection, if we consider it is reasonable to do so.
5.1 The Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth) and Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Rules Instrument 2007 (No. 1) requires us to collect certain identification information about you. We must collect and verify personal information from third parties in respect of AML/CTF checks which are required to be carried out, under AML/CTF Legislation.
6. Incomplete or inaccurate information
7. Sensitive information
8. Dealing with unsolicited personal information
8.1 If we receive personal information that is not solicited by us, we only retain it, if we determine that it is reasonably necessary for one or more of our functions or activities and that you have consented to the information being collected or given the absence of your consent that it was impracticable or unreasonable for us to obtain it under the circumstances.
8.2 If these conditions are not met, we destroy or de-identify the information.
8.3 If such unsolicited information is sensitive information we will obtain your consent to retain it regardless of what the circumstances are.
SECTION D – INTEGRITY OF YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION
9. Quality of personal information
9.1 We ensure that the personal information we collect and use or disclose is accurate, up to date, complete and relevant.
9.2 Please contact us if any of the details you have provided to us change or if you believe that the information we have about you is not accurate or up to date.
9.3 We may also take steps to update personal information we hold, for example, an address, by collecting personal information from publicly available sources such as telephone directories or electoral rolls.
10. Security of personal information
10.1 We are committed to ensure that we protect any personal information we hold from misuse, interference, loss, unauthorised access, modification and disclosure.
10.2 For this purpose we have a range of practices and policies in place to provide a robust security environment. We ensure the on-going adequacy of these measures by regularly reviewing them.
10.3 Our security measures may include, but are not limited to:
(a) educating our staff as to their obligations with regard to your personal information;
(b) requiring our staff to use passwords when accessing our systems;
(c) utilising outsourced serviced IT infrastructure that is secure and monitored;
(d) undertaking penetration testing;
(e) utilising the resources and infrastructure of outsourced service providers that we have appointed who create a secure framework to store data;
(f) providing secure storage for physical records; and
(g) employing physical and electronic means such as alarms, cameras and guards (as required) to protect against unauthorised access to buildings.
SECTION E – USE OR DISCLOSURE OF PERSONAL INFORMATION
11. Use or Disclosure
11.1 If we hold personal information about you that was collected for a particular purpose (“the primary purpose”), we do not use or disclose the information for another purpose (“the secondary purpose”) unless:
(a) We have obtained your consent to use or disclose the information; or
(b) you would reasonably expect us to use or disclose the information for the secondary purpose and the secondary purpose is:
(c) the use or disclosure of the information is required or authorised by or under an Australian law or a court/tribunal order; or
(d) a permitted general situation exists in relation to the use or disclosure of the information by us; or
(e) a permitted health situation exists in relation to the use or disclosure of the information by us, in which case we de-identify the information before disclosing it; or
(f) we reasonably believe that the use or disclosure of the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities conducted by, or on behalf of, an enforcement body; or
12. Who we may communicate with
(a) brokers and agents who refer your business to us;
(b) affiliated product and service providers and external product and service providers for whom we act as agent (so that they may provide you with the product or service you seek or in which you have expressed an interest);
(c) auditors, accountants and advisors we appoint to ensure the integrity of our operations;
(d) any person acting on your behalf, including your solicitor, settlement agent, accountant, executor, administrator, trustee, guardian or attorney;
(e) your referee (to confirm details about you);
(f) if required or authorised to do so, regulatory bodies and government agencies;
(g) credit reporting agencies;
(h) insurers, including proposed insurers and insurance reference agencies (where we are considering whether to accept a proposal of insurance from you and, if so, on what terms);
(i) related body corporates;
(j) other financial institutions and organisations at their request if you seek credit from them (so that they may assess whether to offer you credit);
(k) investors, advisers, trustees and ratings agencies where credit facilities and receivables are pooled and sold (securitised);
(l) other organisations who in conjunction with us provide products and services (so that they may provide their products and services to you); and
(m) professional associations or organisations with whom we conduct an affinity relationship (to verify your membership of those associations or organisations).
13. Outsourcing
14. Disclosure required by law
SECTION F – DIRECT MARKETING
15. Direct marketing
15.1 We only use or disclose the personal information we hold about you for the purpose of direct marketing if we have received the information from you and you have not requested not to receive such information.
15.2 Direct marketing means that we use your personal information to provide you with information on our products and services that may interest you.
15.3 If you wish to opt-out of receiving marketing information altogether, you can:
(a) call us on 02 8317 3514; or
(b) write to us at [email protected].
SECTION G – CROSS BORDER DISCLOSURE OF PERSONAL INFORMATION
16. Disclosing personal information to cross border recipients
(a) we are satisfied the overseas recipient does not breach the Australian Privacy Principles; or
(b) you are able to access to take action to enforce the protection of a law or binding scheme that has the effect of protecting the information in a way that is at least substantially similar to the way in which the Australian Privacy Principles protect the information; or
(c) you have consented to the disclosure after we expressly told you that there is no guarantee that the overseas recipient does not breach the Australian Privacy Principles; or
(d) the disclosure of the information is required or authorised by or under an Australian law or a court/tribunal order; or
(e) a permitted general situation (other than the situation referred to in item 4 or 5 of the table in subsection 16A(1) of the Privacy Act) exists in relation to the disclosure of the information.
SECTION H – ADOPTION, USE OR DISCLOSURE OF GOVERNMENT IDENTIFIERS
17. Adoption of government related identifiers
18. Use or disclosure of government related identifiers
(a) reasonably necessary for us to verify your identity for the purposes of the our activities or functions; or
(b) reasonably necessary for us to fulfil its obligations to a government agency or a State or Territory authority; or
(c) required or authorised by or under an Australian law, regulation or a court/tribunal order; or
(d) within a permitted general situation (other than the situation referred to in item 4 or 5 of the table in subsection 16A(1) of the Privacy Act); or
(e) reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities conducted by, or on behalf of, an enforcement body.
SECTION I – ACCESS TO PESRONAL INFORMATION
19. Use or disclosure of government related identifiers
19.1 You can request us to provide you with access to the personal information we hold about you.
19.2 Requests for access to limited amounts of personal information, such as checking to see what address or telephone number we have recorded, can generally be handled over the telephone.
19.3 If you would like to request access to more substantial amounts of personal information such as details of what is recorded in your account file, we will require you to complete and sign a “Request for Access to Personal Information” form.
19.4 Following receipt of your request, we provide you with an estimate of the access charge and confirm that you want to proceed.
19.5 We do not charge you for making the request for access, however access charges may apply to cover our costs in locating, collating and explaining the information you request.
19.6 We respond to your request as soon as possible and in the manner requested by you. We endeavour to comply with your request within 14 days of its receipt but, if that deadline cannot be met owing to exceptional circumstances, your request will be dealt with within 30 days. It helps us provide access if you can tell us what you are looking for.
19.7 Your identity is confirmed before access is provided.
20. Exceptions
21. Refusal to give access and other means of access
22. Access to a credit report about you
22.1 You have the right to ask for a copy of any credit report we have obtained about you from a credit-reporting agency. However, as we may not have retained a copy after we have used it in accordance with Part IIIA of the Privacy Act the best means of obtaining an up-to-date copy is to get in touch with the credit-reporting agency direct.
22.2 You have a right to have any inaccuracies corrected or, if there is any dispute as to accuracy, to have a note added to your credit reporting agency file explaining your
22.3 If we decline your credit application wholly or partly because of adverse information on your credit report, the Privacy Act, requires us to tell you of that fact and how you can go about getting a copy of your credit report.
22.4 The major credit-reporting agency in Australia is Equifax, https://www.equifax.com.au/. As the largest agency, it is likely that it will be Equifax that you will need to contact in relation to access to an up-to-date copy of your credit report and any correction of information on your file. You can contact Equifax at https://www.equifax.com.au/contact.
SECTION J – CORRECTION OF PERSONAL INFORMATION
23. Correction
23.1 We correct all personal information that we believe to be inaccurate, out of date, incomplete, irrelevant or misleading given the purpose for which that information is held or if you request us to correct the information.
23.2 If we correct your personal information that we previously disclosed to another APP entity you can request us to notify the other APP entity of the correction. Following such a request, we give that notification unless it is impracticable or unlawful to do so.
24. Refusal to correct information
25. Request to associate a statement
SECTION K – CONTACT US AND COMPLAINTS
26. Contact
(b) Email: [email protected]; or
(a) Phone: 02 8317 3514; or
(c) Post: Level 6, 35 Grafton St, Bondi Junction NSW 2022 .
27. Making a privacy complaint
27.1 We offer a free internal complaint resolution scheme to all of our customers. If you have a privacy complaint, please contact us to discuss your concerns.
27.2 To assist us in helping you, we ask you to follow a simple three-step process:
(b) Gather all supporting documents relating to the complaint.
(a) Contact us and we will review your situation and if possible resolve your complaint immediately.
(c) If the matter is not resolved to your satisfaction, please ask to contact our Complaints Officer or put your complaint in writing and send it to Parc Capital Investments at Level 6, 35 Grafton St, Bondi Junction NSW 2022.
27.3 If you are still not satisfied, you have the right to contact the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (“OAIC”). You can contact the OAIC to make a query concerning your privacy rights, or to lodge a complaint with the OAIC about how we have handled your personal You can contact the OAIC’s hotline on 1300 363 992 or visit their website at www.oaic.gov.au. The OAIC has the power to investigate a complaint and make a determination.