Australian funds look to collective DC

The $2 trillion Australian superannuation industry continues to evolve, with the move to collective defined contribution the latest product innovation for pension funds. While the industry is largely defined contribution, it hasn’t been good at providing retirement income products. Now, a number of Australian funds that have had both defined benefit and defined contribution plan members, including UniSuper and Telstra Super, are looking to their Dutch and British contemporaries and introducing collective defined contribution. David Rowley reports.

Telstra Super is to explore the potential to create a collective defined contribution scheme as a way of avoiding sequencing risk for its members.

Chris Davies, chief executive of Telstra Super, says the A$17.5 billion fund has the scale to tailor its own pooled investment vehicle that would smooth investment outcomes.

He believes the fund may not have to rely on an external product provider to create the Comprehensive Income Product for Retirement as recommended in the Financial System Inquiry.

“We have got a dedicated product manager and our own in-house administration, so we can design systems,” said Davies. “Funds with scale can do that, or like other funds we may leverage off a third-party arrangement, whether it is Mercer Lifetime Plus or another.”

The only other Australian superannuation fund that has announced its intention to create a collective DC scheme is UniSuper – a project that its chair Chris Cuffe publicly mooted six years ago and for which a decision is expected this year.

Sponsored Content

Davies said that similar to UniSuper, Telstra Super had members who were used to the idea of pooled investment risk through Telstra’s defined benefit fund – which was closed to new members 15 years ago, but still has 5,400 active members.

“If you got the core competency around defined benefit and you have a core of members who have been through defined benefit then you have the culture, you have the ingredients to do something like a collective defined contribution arrangement.”

Davies is watching what other funds achieve in the space and the moves being made by the UK government to set up a legal and tax framework conducive to allowing collective defined contribution before proceeding.

He is also hoping that the Coalition Government’s long promised liberalisation of tax and legal restrictions on post-retirement product development will ease the way for CDC.

Davies says Telstra Super is committed to offering a sophisticated level of advice, communication and products for its members. To this effect, its submission to the Financial System Inquiry argued against the proposal for a narrow band of approved funds for accumulation on the grounds, that this would lead to a no-frills, low fee approach unlikely to offer the range of engagement and tailored outcomes that Telstra Super is trying to achieve for its members.

Leave a Comment

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

As concerns in private credit mount, Colorado PERA CIO and COO Amy McGarrity says the pension fund isn’t seeing any strains in its growing allocation to the asset class, arguing that long-term investors are shielded from the risks because they can lock up their capital to weather market cycles.

Sort content by

The sudden death and strange afterlife of globalisation

Daniel Celeghin, managing partner at INEFI, argues globalisation is not dead but has morphed so that post-2022 globalisation is a series of deeply rooted local investments that together result in a global portfolio.

The five characteristics of a future portfolio: CAIA

The traditional 60/40 portfolio allocation is no longer enough. The opportunity for alpha is not gone, but the low-hanging fruit has long been harvested, and the path toward higher absolute returns has gotten far more nuanced according to a new report from the Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst (CAIA)

Asset owners fear rising inflation and falling equity valuations

The 2022 annual CIO Sentiment Survey, a collaboration between Top1000funds.com and CaseyQuirk, finds asset owners most concerned about equity valuations and inflation. After three years of fee rises, asset owners are paying less for investments while CIOs in 2022 are also working with a smaller manager roster.

Beyond traditional portfolio construction: incorporating uncertainty

Incorporating uncertainty into the asset allocation process is a complicated but essential ingredient of building portfolio resilience, something investors are valuing more than ever in an environment where inflation, geopolitical and climate risks dominate. GIC and BlackRock have both developed asset allocation frameworks that incorporate investors’ aversion for uncertainty.

HOOPP and OPTrust: Funded status focus

Despite threats to pension funds’ funded status including the investment environment, plan maturity, longevity risk and low interest rates affecting the funding valuation, Canadian funds HOOPP and OPTrust celebrated healthy funded status in recent reports. Top1000funds.com looks at their approach.

AustralianSuper rebalances equities

Australia’s largest superannuation fund, the A$250 billion AustralianSuper, plans to decrease its equity allocation in favour of fixed income according to the fund’s CIO Mark Delaney, as he predicts central banks will tap the brakes on monetary policy amid concerns of rising inflation.

Previous