Canadian penchant for fewer, bigger funds hits Australia

Tony Lally
Tony Lally

The similarities between Canada and Australia are often remarked upon, and they could be about to extend to pension management if an ambitious plan for a ‘mega-merger’ among Australian state-based funds comes to fruition.

The ‘Canadian model’ of a small number of very large pension funds is the opposite of the Australian landscape, which still features more than 270, sometimes tiny, corporate, industry or public sector funds, and almost as many for-profit ‘retail’ counterparts.

However as reported on Top1000funds.com last week, a review of the Australian super system by prominent lawyer Jeremy Cooper has criticised the lack of scale inherent in many of these funds. The ‘Cooper Review’ has recommended a raft of measures, including heightened responsibilities for trustees, which are designed to encourage fund mergers and create a smaller number of more efficiently-run schemes.

Heeding the call is one of Australia’s most commercially-minded industry fund executives, boss of the AUD$16 billion Queensland-based Sunsuper, Tony Lally.

He has made Sunsuper a research partner of Keith Ambachtscheer’s International Centre for Pension Management, a proponent of the ‘Canadian model’, and he was indeed present at the Centre’s annual conference in Toronto last month.

Australia’s four major state-based funds without a Government sponsor – Sunsuper, the Western Australia-based Westscheme, Tasmania’s Tasplan and South Australia’s Statewide Super  – have been meeting since 1995, according to CEO of the $2.5 billion Westscheme, Howard Rosario, taking advantage of the fact they were not competing against each other for members, which enabled them to more frankly share their experiences.

Sponsored Content

The meetings, which tended to take place twice a year in the mornings before the CMSF and ASFA conferences, had entertained the possibilities of co-investments and collective procurement between the funds, if not actual mergers, but nothing concrete happened for many years.

However it’s understood that after Sunsuper bought the old Citistreet business and took control of its own member administration at the start of 2009, CEO Tony Lally mounted something of a campaign to convince his ‘state fund’ colleagues to merge at least some aspects of their operations, with the member administration platform top of the list.

Again, the familiar inertia around big fund mergers had begun to set in, only for the concept to have recently been reinvigorated by the Cooper Review.

While not speaking to the specifics of recent discussions between the state funds, Rosario did admit that Jeremy Cooper’s recent declaration that $2 billion funds were not viable had “exercised my mind and the minds of my board”.

However, Rosario said that commentary on the Cooper Review had focused on MySuper, overlooking the option of being a ‘choice’ fund, and “opening up to the dynamics of business”.

The CEO of Tasplan, Neil Cassidy, believed no merger of the four state-based funds was on the horizon, noting they all had different member administrators, and each had a culture bound up to some extent in their specific geographic location.

Tony Lally was unavailable for comment.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Environmental engagement through benchmarking

Engaging real estate fund managers on their carbon footprint will be more easily implemented following the creation of a Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark, the result of collaborative work by a group of 11 of the world’s largest pension asset managers and Maastricht University.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

NEST-eggs incubated ethically through sharia mandate

The UK’s National Employment Savings Trust (NEST) has awarded F&C Asset Management and HSBC Global Asset Management the management of its ethical and sharia mandates.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Most managers set to look outside the US

The managers most in demand by US investors are those with compelling presences in global and emerging markets’ equities, hedge funds, funds of hedge funds, private equity and real assets.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Long-term risks and the human factor for fiduciaries

While risk for investment portfolios has been well-studied in the light of the financial crisis – if insufficiently before – the notion of long-term risk is still underexplored, according to Roger Urwin.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Restrict rebalancing to US stocks and bonds: Morgan Stanley

A more efficient way to rebalance highly diversified multi-asset portfolios – which contain illiquid assets – could be to restrict the rebalancing to exchanges between US stocks and US bonds only, according to new analysis by Morgan Stanley.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Deepwater execs strike oil with safety bonuses

As incongruous as it sounds, executives at Transocean Ltd – the company that owns the Deepwater Horizon oil rig which exploded in the Gulf of Mexico last year killing 11 people – have been paid bonuses for their improved safety performance.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous