TelstraSuper shutters pension product ahead of Aware merger
The circa $30 billion TelstraSuper will close its RetireAccess Lifetime Pension product and transfer members to an equivalent Challenger product ahead of its merger with Aware Super.
The circa $30 billion TelstraSuper will close its RetireAccess Lifetime Pension product and transfer members to an equivalent Challenger product ahead of its merger with Aware Super.
The US is orienting its foreign policy towards securing access to critical minerals that underpin its economy and defence, according to Veracity Worldwide, and asset owners are taking note of the shift.
The benefits of financial advice are clear for members, but for super funds to reimagine advice as a service available to all members will require someone in the organisation to master complexity, capability, connectivity and capital, and to be a champion for the cause. That someone is the future chief advice officer.
The $4.5 billion Vanguard Super has celebrated three years in the market with double-digit annual returns but is turning its attention to further operational uplift as it looks to open up new growth channels.
Realignment of the global security order and politicisation of institutions is forcing asset owners to rethink their investment theses for certain countries, while political dysfunction also presents a growing threat to market stability.
Directing super funds to invest in nation-building projects could see money flow from the APRA-regulated system and into SMSFs, according to UniSuper CIO John Pearce, who also suggested that super funds were hitting portfolio limits for unlisted assets.
The total portfolio approach can help investors generate better returns in an “increasingly complex and uncertain environment” by changing the way they think about everything from manager research to dynamic asset allocation, according to the Thinking Ahead Institute.
With the top-performing Meat Industry Employees Superannuation Fund disappearing into CareSuper, Investment Magazine sits down with CIO Chris Artis to discuss the headwinds for small funds, the disappearance of superannuation generalists and the shape of the system to come.
In an environment where many traditional assets are wrestling with geopolitics, trade frictions and AI-driven capex, one asset class has quietly delivered consistent, double-digit returns untethered from interest rate shocks and equity market volatility: catastrophe bonds.
UniSuper CIO John Pearce says the $140 billion super fund remains fully invested through the ongoing correction in equity markets, despite risks stemming from trade wars, massive AI capex and the spectre of rising inflation.
The prudential regulator’s first system-wide stress test found that while super funds are an “important stabiliser” of the financial system, they can also transmit and amplify shocks due to their growing size and links to other institutions.
Australia’s super funds are now operating in a more volatile world. That means they need to be prepared for everything from major liquidity events to hot wars, and understand how their members will behave too.