The fees, costs and performance reporting of retail superannuation funds should be aligned with those of MySuper funds to provide greater transparency when members are switched into poor performing, high cost super products, according to the Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees (AIST).
Reflecting concerns about members receiving advice to switch funds, the industry funds body has told the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) that such a move represents an “important baseline issue so that prudential standards may work more effectively”.
“Without such alignment, APRA cannot easily identify, for example:
• The poor value impact of conflicts of interest and other forms of misconduct on member retirement savings.
• Systemic switching of members into poor performing, high cost superannuation products.
• Whether investment performance is delivering fair value.”
Elsewhere in its submission to APRA, the AIST has pointed to issues raised before the Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry around superannuation funds operating within vertically-integrated structures.
It said it believed prudential standards needed to aid meeting the members’ best interests test and noted the issues raised before the Royal Commission including:
• Conflicts arising from multiple directorships.
• Conflicts associated with related party arrangements.
• Conflicts arising from a responsiveness to shareholders as opposed to members of the superannuation fund.
• Conflicts arising from entities which are the trustees of an RSE as well as the RE of a managed investment scheme.
• How conduct which is deliberately not in members’ best interest is to be addressed.
In a Senate submission, the Financial Services Council said super funds should be able to nudge members on engaging with their super and has cautioned against default placements.
The Joint Associations Working Group, which counts FSC in its ranks, has issued an urgent warning to the government.
Senator Jane Hume will join the speaker lineup at the inaugural Australian Wealth Management Summit.
New research from ART has found less than a third of women feel their superannuation is in a good position, reiterating the importance of opening up the advice arena to super funds.
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