Industry Super Australia (ISA) has sought to use Roy Morgan Research data to claim Australia's major banks have been quietly switching tens of thousands of their customers into poorly performing super products.
The ISA has claimed this is being achieved by ramping up direct advice sales channels that sidestep laws which would otherwise require them to act in customer's best interests.
The industry funds organisation claimed the Roy Morgan Research data had revealed a doubling in direct super sales advice from the big four banks between 2011 and 2015 that had also corresponded with a 40 per cent increase in the big four bank's super switching market share.
The ISA's analysis of the Roy Morgan data comes at the same time as a Parliamentary Committee begins the process of interrogating the chief executives of the major banks.
Commenting on the ISA's interpretation, its chief executive, David Whiteley said the apparent flow of members from funds with better satisfaction and performance to inferior funds was "not what we would expect in a competitive market with informed consumers".
"These findings point to obvious market failure and urgent scrutiny is needed of the direct sales tactics employed by Australia's banks that sidestep Future of Financial Advice (FoFA) protections," he said.
"The figures show direct advice is growing quickly and at the expense of traditional channels including financial advisers.
"General advice direct from a bank does not need to meet the best interest obligations and it is likely the banks are using this and linked sales incentives to funnel customers into underperforming funds."
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 manager.
The Central Bank of Ireland has granted the approval of Equity Trustees’ exit from its Irish operations, with the transaction expected to be complete on 30 April.
Super returns continued to climb in March, raising hopes of delivering double-digit returns by June depending on the performance of this next quarter.
The dedicated super fund for emergency services and Victorian government employees is under fire for unpaid entitlements to transport employees, which could exceed $40 million.
I'm sorry but I find this hypocritical of ISA. We inherited a large book of old RSP Legacy product that due to the outrageous exit fees , we cant touch as there is no way we can justify the client losing 1/2 of their balance in penalties. Yet we constantly receive roll over notices into an industry fund. When you talk to the client and inform them that they are going to lose 1/2 the value in exit fees, "oh we were told by abc at xyz industry fund not to worry about it"
Sorry but ISA is no better than the Banks, the only difference is that ISA is 100% conflicted, not just abit conflicted
Chris . The penalties are an illusion, a deliberate deception. I showed the sums to leaders of the advice industry and published the explanation in my book that sold 30,000 copies over 20 years ago. Never been challenged . Would anyone like me to publish the full explanation ??
Agree completely Chris. A client of mine was just told by their work industry fund that it was cheaper and performed much better than the account we manage - without one single comparison or question regarding the other fund. When the client said their adviser had shown them it wasn't true, they said that 'advisers lie all the time'. They even said their investment fees are nil. Yet somehow they are the savior to the industry?
Industry funds have just got to stop lying. The new superannuation funds that banks have launched are not "poorly performing". Customers are consolidating their super into accounts that are cost-effective in their own right (cheaper than industry funds) and are saving in many instances $100s (and occasionally $1000s) in fees. They also offer a different investment proposition, which is lifecycle investing, which isn't a one-sized-fits-all proposition. Industry funds are building up large sales forces, spending the national debt on advertising to convince people to switch to them and are developing vertically integrated advice business. Industry funds should stick to that rather than sledging (at best) and lying about their competition (whom they are starting to imitate).
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