As the Retirement Income Covenant (RIC) has implications for financial advice, guidance is needed about the boundaries between the provision of factual information and general advice, according to the Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees (AIST).
AIST’s submission to the RIC exposure draft legislation said while it supported a principles-based RIC, it recommended consequential legislative and regulatory changes.
The changes included:
On how retirees chose to access their retirement balances, AIST said the EM needed to confirm that retirees, and especially those with modest levels of retirement savings, were not precluded from accessing these as a lump sum.
AIST also noted the legislation needed to state that trustees would have regard to the needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in their retirement income strategies and development of cohorts.
The requirement for trustees to make every determination made about their strategy public was unnecessarily onerous and should be removed, AIST believed.
It was also recommended that:
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.
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