Why Mark Rider believes the future is brighter with active managers

The $34 billion Brighter Super is set to shift a significant proportion of equities assets in MySuper from passive to active management. Chief investment officer Mark Rider says the move is possible because of the scale created by mergers, and the fund will be looking to its newly appointed active managers to generate performance through the cycle by taking idiosyncratic risks.

Baker Bookmakers’ guide to the hydrogen races

The hydrogen revolution is well and truly underway. The so-called “smart money”, including Bill Gates’ Breakthrough Energy Ventures, Jeff Bezos’ Climate Pledge Fund and Khosla Ventures, has placed early bets on natural hydrogen, despite uncertainties around its location and whether it can be economically extracted. Here is a brief form guide for asset owners disinclined to do their own deep due diligence.

Super sector must put public interest first in SG debate

The Coalition is reportedly considering a proposal to reduce the superannuation guarantee to 9 per cent if it wins the election. Many in the industry would understandably view any such move as a partisan effort to weaken the system, but they must also be open-minded about the evidence and accept that improving quality of service is the best response to critics. 

Why Norges Bank leads the world in transparency

Two years in a row, Norges Bank has topped the Global Pension Transparency Benchmark, published by Investment Magazine sister publication, Top1000funds. But when interviewed in 2023 about being awarded the most transparent fund, it was clearly a priority but not yet a completed project for the Norges Bank CEO, Nicolai Tangen. In the year since then, the fund has taken the idea of transparency and run with it, making huge gains through a concerted effort that among other things required advocating the government to make governance changes.

Financial advice reform a thorn in retirement’s side

Superannuation funds are being called upon to do more to assist the millions of Baby Boomers currently transitioning to retirement. But the task of developing retirement income strategies for members has been tripped up by the nation’s notoriously complex financial advice laws. And the project’s success now hinges on a reform agenda that remains far from certain.

Don’t wait to embrace a simple retirement for members

Some superannuation funds seem eager to hold back their delivery of better retirement outcomes to members until the financial advice reforms are bedded down, or members have more money, or the SG rate increases. But the tools are available now to provide a better solution to members. The key ingredient is keeping it simple.