(December-2003) Back us up on fees: ASFA

29 September 2005
| By Zilla Efrat |

The Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) has called on the Government and the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) to get behind its new recommendations on fee disclosure.

The recommendations follow what ASFA describes as a “breakthrough” after it produced a new comparable and meaningful bottom line measure of super fund fees on the back of research it has done with Chant West.

The research, which examined the fees of 50 super funds, sifted through the different ways fees are currently revealed, and the ways they are not revealed.

ASFA CEO Philippa Smith says: “The holy grail of straightforward fee comparisons is closer, but additional work will be needed by industry, ASIC and the Government to ensure a standardised approach.”

Chant West’s Warren Chant says: “[The research] shows the huge diversity of disclosure, in terms of completeness and clarity. The recommendations that we are putting forward would standardise exactly what is disclosed and how it is measured.”

Among these are that investment fees need to be disclosed more fully and more clearly. To allow comparability, a single fee based on a single investment option is recommended.

The researchers consider the exclusion of entry and exit fees from a bottom line fee comparison a significant omission. They find that the typical entry/exit fees in a personal retail product could add 1 to 1.5 percentage points to the published fee over a five year period. Instead, they recommend an ‘average total fees approach’ to provide a clearer bottom line.

ASFA adds that fees should always be shown gross of income tax and inclusive of GST. In addition, any performance fees paid or payable to investment managers should be reflected in investment fees.

Meanwhile, parliamentary secretary to the Treasurer, Ross Cameron, has welcomed ASFA’s research on ways to improve ASIC’s fee disclosure model. He notes that the Government will await the presentation of ASFA’s consumer testing research results to ASIC and other members of the group for their joint consideration as part of the on-going collaborative approach to implementing the Financial Services Reform disclosure requirements.

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest developments in Super Review! Anytime, Anywhere!

Grant Banner

From my perspective, 40- 50% of people are likely going to be deeply unhappy about how long they actually live. ...

1 year 8 months ago
Kevin Gorman

Super director remuneration ...

1 year 8 months ago
Anthony Asher

No doubt true, but most of it is still because over 45’s have been upgrading their houses with 30 year mortgages. Money ...

1 year 8 months ago

The super fund is open to the idea of using crypto ETFs to invest in the asset class, but says there are important compliance checks to tick off first....

17 hours ago

ASIC has launched civil penalty proceedings in the Federal Court against one of the super trustees wrapped up in the Shield Master Fund failure....

17 hours ago

Industry associations have welcomed the Treasurer’s review into the superannuation performance test and called for targeted changes that would enable investment in certai...

18 hours ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND
Fund name
3y(%)pa
1
DomaCom DFS Mortgage
74.26 3 y p.a(%)
3