Home / News / ‘They’re going to get smashed’: YFYS chaos looms for choice

‘They’re going to get smashed’: YFYS chaos looms for choice

News

A mere 13 funds were dispatched by the first round of the Your Future Your Super (YFYS) performance test. Chant West believes the damage could be worse in the choice sector.

Later this year, APRA’s performance test will be brought to bear against the choice sector after a dry run on the smaller universe of MySuper products. Most MySuper products are growth-oriented variations on a standard 70/30 allocation, but the choice world is more disparate, and contains many more conservative options. It’s those conservative options that could suffer the most.

The problem for some of the funds that have already failed the test arose in the defensive part of the MySuper product. Funds that had taken “appropriate action” to minimise member risk by reducing the duration of their bond holdings or reallocating into defensive alternatives in the face of expected interest rate rises came up short against the performance test.

“When we move to choice investment options, and when we look at choice products where they’re conservative and they’ve got 70-80 per cent in bonds or cash, or where they might have 50 per cent plus in bonds, and the fund has made a choice to go short duration rather than benchmark duration – they’re going to get smashed,” Ian Fryer, Chant West general manager, told media on Tuesday (March 2).

Indeed, Fryer believes that a “very significant proportion” of choice options at the conservative end may fail the test because they went shorter duration. And with funds banned from accepting new money after two successive failures, that could lead to a “really weird arrangement” where older clients won’t be able to put money into the conservative options they want – and likely need.

“That’s a strange place to be in a superannuation world where we try to provide investment options that cover the risk spectrum,” Fryer said.

Preventing the chaos might require the industry to launch the same protests it did when the first iteration of the performance test was set to measure unlisted infrastructure against listed. At that time, industry bodies and individual funds warned on the benchmark risk, and Treasury was forced to add unlisted benchmarks to better match how funds were investing.

Here, Fryer believes APRA or Treasury could split growth alternatives and defensive alternatives – which would require asset allocation information that APRA historically did not collect but which it now is. Funds also have different standards for how they determine growth and defensive, and Fryer believes there needs to be “much clearer guidelines and rules on this growth/defensive piece” – a project which he’s working on alongside David Bell, executive director of the Conexus Institute.

That project is hard, but fixed interest is harder. Data on historical levels of duration going back to the beginning of MySuper – and before – is hard to come by. But even if the benchmarks could be scaled back to match super fund thinking on duration, there is the question of the inclusion of credit and the boost it could give funds if duration was shortened. Fryer thinks that might be “too hard” as well.

And these are all minor fixes for a test that Fryer believes is not so much a bright line as “blunt instrument”. The test comes up with one number that determines whether a fund will pass or fail – but that’s not going to accurately measure “in any way how a fund has gone.”

“A number of the funds that failed the test did so because in their equities they were going more on the defensive side – more low vol,” Fryer said. “The reason they were doing that was because they had older members; it sort of made sense.”

“But it just so happened that the period of measurement for the performance test has been one long bull market… It hasn’t been a cycle; it’s been one long bull market that’s benefited anybody who’s been risk-on and smashed anybody who’s been risk off. Virtually everybody who failed has older members and wanted  to invest more defensively on some of these asset classes. A measurement of one number cannot take into account this stuff.”

Lachlan Maddock

  • Lachlan is editor of Investor Strategy News and has extensive experience covering institutional investment.




    Print Article

    Related
    Australian Retirement Trust joins the jet set

    The $280 billion ART has become the latest megafund to set up an offshore outpost as it looks to secure “even more compelling investment opportunities” for its 2.3 million members.

    Staff Writer | 26th Apr 2024 | More
    What to do about the ‘concentration conundrum’: Pzena

    Owning the largest stocks has historically been a recipe for underperformance over every period, according to value house Pzena, but the madness of benchmark construction means some investors have few choices but to.

    Staff Writer | 19th Apr 2024 | More
    Vanguard’s former super man lands at Bell AM

    The passive giant’s former super boss has found a new home at Bell Asset Management, and comes into the increasingly tough business of active management with his “eyes wide open”.

    Lachlan Maddock | 17th Apr 2024 | More
    Popular