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Monday, 4 February 2019

Update to the PPSR - R6d

A small update went into the PPSR over the weekend.  The main change has been long awaited and should be welcomed by all.

Previously, when lodging a new registration, the expiry period options only allowed for 25-year and indefinite periods to be chosen, for any other period, a specific date needed to be added:


With one of the most common registrations periods preferred by trade credit suppliers being 7 years, having to specifically add an end date was, not only a nuisance but also fraught with the opportunity for error.

This has now been fixed and users from this morning onwards are able to simply select a 7-year registration period and let the PPSR calculate the end date:


Not an especially radical change but one that should make life just a little bit easier, and that's nice.











Tuesday, 6 November 2018

Government's Response to the PPSR Review

Bruce Whittaker completed his formal review of the PPSR in March 2015 and his report, containing 394 recommendations, was put to Parliament at that time.  I first wrote to the Attorney Generals' Department in September 2016 asking what progress had been made in assessing the review's recommendations and have begun making something of an annual habit of it ever since.

The request for information and the formal response from the AGD after 18 months consideration can be found HERE, and the response after 30 months can be found HERE.  Some 44 months on from the PPSR Review's release I've received the following response to my latest enquiry requesting an update on the progress of its consideration:

Thank you for your email about the Government’s response to the Review of the Personal Property Securities Act. I am sorry for the delay in responding to you.

Regarding timelines, while the department has made considerable progress on the response to the Review, we are currently consulting with a range of industries and stakeholders regarding a number of the more complex recommendations in the Review.  Following the conclusion of this consultation, the Government intends to release its response to the Review. This is to provide stakeholders with notice of the Government’s position on the review as soon as possible. Following this, the department will undertake broader consultation on the corresponding exposure draft legislation. We are not in a position to provide a release date at this time, but will keep you updated.

With all due respect to the AGD, this doesn't represent any advance on their update last year in which they advised:

The Government intends to release an Exposure Draft of a Bill to amend the Act and a prototype PPS Register, for public consultation. Stakeholders will have an opportunity to provide comment on the Bill and the Register before the Government takes further action to implement the recommendations of the Review.
The Government will make further announcements about the timing of public consultation on the Bill and Register.
If anything, the latest response seems to represent something of a step backwards.

At this stage, it might be worth pointing out that it 'only' took around 2 years from the passing of the 2009 Act to commencement of the Register in the first place (not that anyone considered that to be particularly quick) and we are now approaching 4 years from the presentation of the Review's findings without the Government having even released a response for consultation let alone an implementation strategy.

With so many finding the registration of their security interests on the PPSR an overly complicated exercise fraught with the possibility of error, it is disappointing that there is such delay in implementing recommendations designed to simplify the process and remove many of the Act's pitfalls.

Thursday, 6 September 2018

How to Renew a PPSR Registration

As seen in my last post, we're rapidly approaching the time where many suppliers will be needing to renew registrations they put in place shortly after the start of the PPSR in 2012.


Renewal should be a straightforward process. 

Individual PPSR Brokers will probably have different approaches to the activity but the following shows the step by step process involved in renewing your registrations directly on the PPSR website.

In order to attempt this, you will need to have already established an account with the PPSR – this is a requirement for setting up an SPG but might have been avoided if the supplier’s SPG was set up for them by an intermediary that already had a PPSR account.


The following steps show the process once you have navigated to the PPSR and logged into your account.


Access your Secured Party Group (SPG) and click on the Group Registrations tab:



Use the 'Other filter options' to select a suitable range of expiry dates:




This will generate a screen showing all registrations due to expire within the selected time frame.

Select the registration you want to renew and click on the renew button:




Unfortunately, for reasons that are not entirely clear, if you make multiple selections, ie, you have a number of registrations that need to be renewed, the ‘Renew’ button becomes greyed out and unavailable!  In other words, registrations can only be renewed one-by-one, so it could be a bit of a slog if you have a lot of registrations expiring at the same time.




Once the Renew button is clicked you’ll be asked to choose a new expiry date and be given the opportunity to review the details of the registration being renewed:



It’s a little annoying that while the PPSR allows for simple selections for 25 year and indefinite registrations, it doesn’t allow for a simple 7-year registration – instead, the PPSR requires the user to manually enter a 7-year expiry.

You should also note that, when setting the expiry date for, say, 7 years, the 7 year period counts from the current day’s date and NOT the original expiry date. 

After that, it’s a simple matter of confirming the renewal and paying the renewal fee (which will be exactly the same as if a new registration were being lodged):



While it should only take a minute to renew a registration, make sure you don’t cut things too fine and miss the expiry date.  Registrations that have already expired cannot be renewed!

Obviously, a third party PPSR Services provider should be able to provide bulk renewal facilities along with an alert process warning of impending expiries and their own renewal processes are likely to work quite differently.


UPDATE: AFSA has now told me that, following my whinge suggestion that a simple 7-year expiry selection should be available for renewals, they have implemented that change.  Renewals will now be a little bit easier... which is nice.