International ratings agency Fitch Ratings has found that most of Australia’s major public listed companies have minimal exposures to unfunded superannuation liabilities.
The agency’s survey of companies in the S&P/ASX 50 Index, shows that only two companies reported unfunded super liability exposures of more than 3 per cent of shareholders’ funds at the time of releasing their most recent annual reports. The liabilities were about 5 to 8 per cent of shareholders’ funds.
Fitch Ratings director Michael Hermans says: “We were aware there had been a significant change from defined benefit to defined contribution, so we surveyed these companies to see if there was any potential issues arising from that in terms of the creditworthiness of funds.”
The Australian findings were quite different to results in Europe where the under-funding of pension liabilities has become an important credit issue.
The responsible investment body is warning that a one-size-fits-all ESG framework mirroring those in the UK and the EU could do more harm than good.
Australian super funds are monitoring the US closely as President Donald Trump increasingly intervenes in corporate policy, moves that are reverberating through global markets and prompting reassessments of portfolio risk.
Industry fund HESTA has filed an appeal against an ATO decision on tax offsets from franking credits, with the Australian Retirement Trust set to file a similar claim soon.
The latest superannuation performance test results have shown improvements, but four in 10 trustee-directed products continue to exhibit “significant investment underperformance”, warns APRA.