MAGAZINE OF CHOICE FOR AUSTRALIA’S WEALTH INDUSTRY
www.moneymanagement.com.au
Vol. 35 No 6 | April 22, 2021
22
TAX
Year-end tax strategies
SUPERANNUATION
24
Your Future, Your Super
A rollercoaster of changes
How four adviser breaches could escalate to 198
EQUITIES
BY MIKE TAYLOR
PRINT POST APPROVED PP100008686
Shop ‘til you drop ONE of the more unusual elements of this pandemic and recession has been the ability of retailers to hold onto their sales in what would typically be a troubling period. While retailers usually tended to lose sales in a recession as people tightened their belts, the quick rollout of Government stimulus meant many people were less affected than they could have been. With increased household savings and limited ability to travel, they were putting money to use in retailers instead with stocks such as JB Hi-Fi, Wesfarmers, Harvey Norman and Super Retail Group all seeing their share prices rise significantly. There was also sharp growth for online businesses such as Kogan as people turned online after being unable to visit physical stores with the firm stating it had a 76% year-on-year increase in new customers. Alex Shevelev, senior analyst at Forager Funds Management, said: “The stimulus demand was a big boom for retailers, especially those focused on home consumption and improvement. It was not what we expected. The speed and the size of the stimulus was quick and significant and the reallocation of spending by consumers away from travel and restaurants was quick as well”.
06MM220421_01-16.indd 1
26
INSURANCE
Full feature on page 18
IT will be virtually impossible for small financial planning firms to comply with the new breach reporting regime proposed to be imposed on the industry via the Financial Sector Reform (Hayne Royal Commission Response Protecting Consumers (2020 Measures)) Regulations 2021: Breach Reporting legislation, according to the Association of Financial Advisers (AFA). What is more, the AFA has cited member feedback which suggests that four breaches reported by a licensee in 2020 could be escalated to as many as 198 under the new regime. In a submission filed with the Treasury, the AFA has strongly complained that the breach reporting measures contained in the legislation go well beyond what was
proposed in the final report of the Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry. “We believe that the impact is much greater than was appreciated when the bill was drafted, and we have therefore recommended that the Government consider a deferral of the commencement of this new regime,” the AFA has said. “Our serious concern with respect to the implications of the Financial Sector Reform (Hayne Royal Commission Response) Bill 2020, is that it is significantly moving away from the concept of significant breach reporting and that this new regime will involve an exponential increase in the number of breaches that need to be reported and many of these will be of a largely administrative nature,” it said. Continued on page 3
Wilson’s loaded home deposit super questions THE chair of the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics, Tim Wilson, appears to have made political the issue of allowing people to access superannuation for first home deposits onto the committee’s agenda via a series of questions on notice to superannuation funds. Wilson’s questioning of superannuation funds has been revealed in questions on notice filed by Wilson as part of his committee’s Review of the Four Major Banks and other Financial Institutions with industry fund, Prime Super, being amongst the first to provide answers. Wilson’s use of the questions on notice comes amid claims by some member of the Federal Opposition that his actions are inappropriate and represent a politicisation of the committee process. Among the questions asked of Prime Super by Wilson were: Continued on page 3
15/04/2021 11:53:43 AM