AMP Signature Super and Sunsuper Personal have emerged at the top of the list in the Heron Quality Star Ratings launched this week.
The new ratings system sees Heron expand its long-standing product assessment process into a fully-fledged ratings service, which will see Australia’s major superannuation funds assessed twice a year.
Heron Partnership managing director Christopher Butler said he believed the new ratings system was precise because it assessed the funds against around 150 benchmarks.
He said the primary goal of the ratings was to provide a realistic and objective representation of the strengths and weaknesses of a product, with the ratings being based on feature-specific benchmarks.
“Unlike some other rating systems, there is no limit to the number of products that can receive a five star rating,” Butler said.
The ratings revealed 17 corporate superannuation products had gained a five star rating from Heron, while 22 industry fund products had gained a five star rating, with AMP Signature Super leading in the corporate fund arena, while Sunsuper Personal emerged top of the class with respect to retail offerings.
Following the roundtable, the Treasurer said the government plans to review the superannuation performance test, stressing that the review does not signal its abolition.
The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has placed superannuation front and centre in its 2025-26 corporate plan, signalling a period of intensified scrutiny over fund expenditure, governance and member outcomes.
Australian Retirement Trust (ART) has become a substantial shareholder in Tabcorp, taking a stake of just over 5 per cent in the gaming and wagering company.
AustralianSuper CEO Paul Schroder has said the fund will stay globally diversified but could tip more money into Australia if governments speed up decisions and provide clearer, long-term settings – warning any mandated local investment quota would be “a disaster”.