Super Needs To Get It’s House In Order – ASIC

In a speech today by Greg Medcraft, Chairman, Australian Securities and Investments Commission “ASIC explained: Who is the corporate watchdog, what does it do and why should Australians care?” at the National Press Club of Australia, he was critical of the super industry:

Around 14 million Australians have a super account. Generally, super doesn’t have a guaranteed outcome – which is why you should be interested in your super. And one day, each and every one of you will retire. Super is often invested in equity and debt capital markets and the funds management sector – all of which are regulated by ASIC. And, with super growing, our regulatory perimeter is increasing. In fact, as of the middle of this year, Australia had super assets of $1.85 trillion, with Treasury estimating that by 2030 this will increase to $5.1 trillion. Ladies and gentlemen, my point is this – we matter to Australians because of superannuation. We matter because most Australians have a lot of skin in the game. And that is the game ASIC is in.

Super generally doesn’t guarantee an outcome. Because of this, Australian investors need to have trust and confidence in financial advice. In fact, Australian investors deserve to have trust and confidence in financial advice. I have long been passionate about lifting trust and confidence in this sector. Only one in five Australians get financial advice. With recent high – profile cases of advisers mis-selling financial products, this is sadly no surprise. The industry needs to get its house in order.

Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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