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Super is at peak illiquidity: UniSuper CIO

Super is at peak illiquidity: UniSuper CIO

Chief investment officer of the $170 billion UniSuper told an Investment Magazine podcast that demographic shifts mean Australia’s super funds are at “peak exposure” to illiquid assets, while the resurgence of the retail platforms could create near-term liquidity constraints.

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Diversa applies for $239m First Guardian government bailout

Diversa applies for $239m First Guardian government bailout

Diversa Trustees has applied to the government for a bailout of First Guardian investors worth approximately $239 million, arguing the losses were a result of fraud and it will be in the best financial interest to members.

Shield, First Guardian reforms must not become a covert operation to restrict competition

Shield, First Guardian reforms must not become a covert operation to restrict competition

There is broad consensus in industry and Canberra that the collapses of the Shield and First Guardian master funds – and failures that led to them – demand a regulatory response. But getting that response wrong could create an uneven playing field in the industry and some counterproductive consumer outcomes.

Contemplating the impacts of a lost decade for markets

Contemplating the impacts of a lost decade for markets

Super funds and their members could be exposed to returns turning out to be poor over an extended period. Were that to happen, confidence in the system itself could be shaken.

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Profiles
GESB CEO calls time: ‘Past regime of default super’ no longer sustainable

GESB CEO calls time: ‘Past regime of default super’ no longer sustainable

GESB chief executive Ben Palmer is set to leave the Western Australian government super fund, ending a 13-year tenure after steering the fund through the most significant change in its history. In a rare interview, Palmer examines the past, present and future of super and explains why GESB is treating platforms, not profit-to-member funds, as its benchmark.

Why HESTA’s ‘joined-up thinking’ is one of its CIO’s favourite things

Why HESTA’s ‘joined-up thinking’ is one of its CIO’s favourite things

Sonya Sawtell-Rickson joined HESTA as the health industry workers’ super fund was taking steps towards investment internalisation and a total portfolio approach. She says the moves have been vindicated not only by member returns but in the “joined-up” conversations the now-$96 billion fund has with the companies it invests in.

Member engagement
Pension Policy Series podcast: Expediting regulatory reform

Pension Policy Series podcast: Expediting regulatory reform

The Conexus Institute executive director, Dr David Bell, and research fellow, Dr Geoff Warren, discuss key legislative reforms currently in the pipeline that need to be expedited by the government to support funds in their development of better outcomes for members.

Governance
Why funds need to deal with TPA’s ‘free rider’ problem 

Why funds need to deal with TPA’s ‘free rider’ problem 

More and more super funds are pivoting to the TPA approach, but will need to confront the long-standing issues with accountability that come with it if they want that model to be sustainable into the future.

Aware backs tougher law to ensure company action against modern slavery

Aware backs tougher law to ensure company action against modern slavery

Aware Super has backed the call for a legislative change that will introduce mandatory human rights due diligence for large Australian companies, as head of responsible investment Liza McDonald said it’s a “reasonable request” which will help asset owners understand and manage the governance risks in their portfolios.

Investments
The world won’t wait for the investment committee 

The world won’t wait for the investment committee 

The institutions managing long-term savings might not be built to respond at the speed the world now moves. The gap between knowing and acting – which, ultimately, is where all risk lives – is one they can’t afford to keep open.

Private credit managers say investor concerns are overhyped

Private credit managers say investor concerns are overhyped

Investment leaders in private credit have dismissed concerns about the asset class, arguing the real issue is a mismatch between the liquidity of the asset class and the expectations of non-institutional investors.