Budget’s housing affordability schemes missed the mark
The budget’s provisions for housing affordability are just distractions while the government dances around real reform, Sally Rose writes.
The budget’s provisions for housing affordability are just distractions while the government dances around real reform, Sally Rose writes.
The government was right not to allow greater access to super for homes but in the future it could be a good idea, Anthony Asher writes.
Dr Simon Longstaff from The Ethics Centre contemplates what the rise of automated technology means for the financial services sector.
Institutional investors should apply the same due diligence to recruiting that they do to selecting assets and managers, Guy McKanna writes.
QSuper’s Damian Lillicrap says ordinary savers would be better served if more super funds dumped their peer-relative performance objectives.
Accurate forecasts are essential to budgeting; investors, CEOs, and federal treasurers alike need learn how to spot the reliable ones.
Super trustees need more flexibility to design what’s best for their fund, MetLife chief Deanne Stewart argues.
The detail needs to be worked through but the government’s MyRetirement framework is on the right track, Challenger’s Richard Howes writes.
People working in financial services need to accept that “proximity to money” makes them more likely to engage in poor ethical behaviour.
Forcing well-run smaller default superannuation funds out of the market may well reduce competition and choice, says Angie Mastrippolito.
As super funds’ members head towards retirement phase, there is much funds can learn from the investment strategies insurers put to use.
The snapshot highlights how hard it is to determine what individuals managing superannuation money in the biggest bank-owned funds are paid.