Chant West: average Australian fund to make loss

Chant West, the asset manager analyst, expects the average Australian superannuation fund to have a loss this year.

The Sydney-based firm expects the median so-called growth funds to have on average a three per cent loss in 2011.

Chant West defines a “median growth” fund to have between 61 per cent and 80 per cent of its investments in so-called growth assets, typically stocks.

Other funds are doing better.

So-called conservative funds, 21 per cent to 40 per cent invested in so-called growth assets, will have on average a 2.5 per cent return in 2011, says Chant West.

Over the past 10 years so-called balanced funds, 41 per cent to 60 per cent invested in so-called growth assets, have had a 4.5 per cent annual return, according to Chant West.

So-called conservative funds have delivered a 5 per cent annual gain, it says.

, , ,

Leave a Comment

Super funds grapple with hidden AI cross-exposures as boom runs on 

As super funds work to understand their total portfolio exposure to the artificial intelligence thematic, a complex picture of hidden betas and “attachment points” is gradually emerging. They also need to figure out how to play the same thematic in the “tricky” China market.

Sort content by