There are as many as 20 superannuation funds which are likely to face significant pressure from the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) when it publishes its heatmap data this week and at least a further 20 who will be on notice that they are facing regulatory scrutiny.
That is the bottom line of evidence given by APRA deputy chair, Helen Rowell to a Parliamentary Committee in which she stated that 20 funds were already on the regulator’s heatmap radar.
Discussing the number of funds which would be under scrutiny, Rowell pointed to the 20 definite under-performers.
“When we've looked at the outcomes of what will be published, we've looked at two main groups of what we might call underperformers—those that are looking really quite poor across a number of dimensions, and there are probably about 20 in that group,” she said. “Then there's another group that sits a little bit above that, but still has some issues, which is around a similar size.”
“The ones that are pale yellow to white are the other half of the MySuper population,” Rowell said.
The APRA deputy chair said that the group of funds identified as under-performers was larger than APRA would have liked but noted that the regulator was not surprised by the funds which had been included in the list.
“We’ve been engaging with these entities to try and get them to improve over some time,” she said.
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A member of the super fund has approached ASIC to investigate potentially misleading or deceptive representations by UniSuper regarding the holdings of its sustainable portfolios.
The median growth fund delivered 1.9 per cent in March, adding to the “stunning” rally that has seen super funds gain 11 per cent since November.
Vanguard has affirmed its support for the current super performance test, emphasising the importance of keeping the process straightforward.
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