ISA will change and continue with super ad campaign

26 June 2014
| By Jason |
image
image
expand image

Industry Super Australia (ISA) has made changes to its “Compare the Pair” adverts after concerns were raised by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) but has vowed they will continue despite efforts to stop the adverts airing. 

ISA stated that it would make changes to the adverts after ASIC raised concerns about what constituted an 'average’ retail or industry super fund and the size and make-up of the sample set of funds used to calculate the claims in the advertising. 

ISA chief executive David Whiteley stated ISA had worked co-operatively with ASIC to make the changes but claimed the need to do was as the result of a campaign by bank-owned funds “to avoid competition based on net investment returns”. 

“This campaign has also seen the banks lobby to reduce consumer protections in financial advice and introduce a 'free for all’ in default super where banks 'leverage’ their business-banking relationships to become the default super for employees,” he said.  

Whiteley stated that the advertising campaign, which had been running in various forms for nearly ten years, would now include spoken and written disclaimers and more prominent details of the retail super funds being compared to industry super funds.  

He also said ISA would continue to use the modelling provided by research agency SuperRatings which compares the average net performance of the 15 industry super funds within ISA and 63 retail super funds tracked by SuperRatings with a 10 year performance history.  

SuperRatings chief executive Nathan MacPhee said there was no selection bias in the choice of the 63 retail funds but that they all had a consistent 10 year return history.  

McPhee said the list of funds represented an expanded comparison set from 10 years ago when the original adverts compared 16 retail and industry funds.  

He also stated that ASIC had not questioned the modelling, which also covered one, three, five and seven year results, in any way.

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Add new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Recommended for you

sidebar subscription

Never miss the latest developments in Super Review! Anytime, Anywhere!

Grant Banner

From my perspective, 40- 50% of people are likely going to be deeply unhappy about how long they actually live. ...

3 months 3 weeks ago
Kevin Gorman

Super director remuneration ...

4 months ago
Anthony Asher

No doubt true, but most of it is still because over 45’s have been upgrading their houses with 30 year mortgages. Money ...

4 months ago

Michael Lovett, who left the investment firm just three months after launching its Vanguard Super offering, has taken up a chief executive role at an Australian asset man...

5 hours ago

As Australia gears up for the May budget, Treasurer Jim Chalmers has shed light on the significant global economic challenges that are shaping the nation’s fiscal decisio...

6 hours ago

A fintech leader has said that AI technologies will have profound implications for the superannuation sector....

6 hours ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND