MAGAZINE OF CHOICE FOR AUSTRALIA’S WEALTH INDUSTRY
www.moneymanagement.com.au
Vol. 34 No 17 | September 24, 2020
16
MULTI-ASSET
Meeting outcomes
EDUCATION
30
Debunking FASEA myths
PRACTICE MANAGEMENT
34
TOOLBOX
SMSFs and property
How spooked super fund members crystallised their losses BY MIKE TAYLOR
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Good practice management is no longer ‘one size fits all’ ALTHOUGH there is no right or wrong way when it comes to practice management, advisers need to be clear of what they want to achieve for their business and how they want to prioritise time and define growth. In order to do that, practices need to ensure they have the most suitable structure in place which reflects their market position and aspirations. They also need to make sure they have made the right strategic decisions around their partnerships and have chosen the most accurate metrics to track their operational performance. But most of all, good practice management comes down to understanding every business is different. They will all have different needs and different things that they are good at so it is a matter of asking the right questions and finding the most suitable solutions. On top of that, technology is a key ingredient for smoothly running financial planning practices and helping free up advisers’ time by allowing them to focus on their core business. However, planners say, it is still hard for some to find full end-to-end technology solutions which can offer assistance from the very first inquiry that clients make all the way through to advice delivery and ongoing service. At the same time, there are still a number of practices that struggle with systems that require configuration, training and upfront investments.
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Full feature on page 20
THOUSANDS of superannuation fund members who reacted to the early market volatility generated by the COVID-19 pandemic by switching their superannuation investment options simply crystallised their losses. Superannuation funds have revealed to Federal Parliament that in the space of less than a month they lost billions of dollars in value, a good deal of which has since been regained. An examination of evidence produced for the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics showed that the critical period during which superannuation fund members were most exposed to crystallising their losses was between the last week of February and the third week of March. It shows that superannuation
funds lost as much as 20% of their value in that one-month period, with thousands of members making the unwise and dangerous decision to switch their investment options, thereby often crystallising their losses. What is more, the data provided to the Parliament shows that many of those who rushed to switch during this multi-billion downturn missed out on the opportunity to ride the recovery in the market which saw funds return a positive 2.7% in the first two months of the new financial year. In the case of Australia’s largest superannuation fund, AustralianSuper, 76,042 members opted to switch in a 21-day period during which the fund acknowledged that $34.2 billion had been stripped from the value of the fund. AustralianSuper also reported Continued on page 3
ASX highlights benefits of financial advice BY LAURA DEW
OVER 68% of advised investors made changes to the portfolio in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, compared to just over half of other investors, according to the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX). In a report into Australian investors conducted in January and then again in May 2020, the ASX said advised investors had been “particularly active” during the period. They were more likely than other investors to invest spare cash in the three months to May 2020 and increase their allocation to Australian direct shares. In contrast, non-advised clients were more likely than advised ones to have switched their investments to cash or increased cash weightings and to have increased allocations to international shares. “Advised investors have been particularly active in responding to the pandemic, with 68% making changes to their portfolios, Continued on page 3
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