Mercury (Hobart)

Hostplus on top in super year of woe

Most funds in negative territory

- DAVID ROSS

HOSTPLUS has topped the tables as the best balanced superannua­tion fund in Australia for returns in both the past 12 months and past 10 years, according to SuperRatin­gs analysis.

The Hostplus Balanced fund, which delivered a 1.6 per cent return in the past year and a 9.7 per cent return in the past 10 years, outpaced all others. Coming in second place was the QANTAS Super Gateway – Growth fund, which delivered 0.6 per cent growth. This was followed by Christian Super – MyEthicalS­uper, which returned 0.5 per cent to members in the past year.

The results come at a challengin­g time for superannua­tion funds, with the majority delivering nil or negative returns to members in the past year as asset values tumbled.

SuperRatin­gs noted that although many funds closed out the year in the red, there had been some small recovery in July, with median balanced options delivering a 0.9 per cent rally in the first 11 days of July. Hostplus CEO David Elia said the chart-toping performanc­e of the fund was “a testament to Hostplus’s active investment approach, especially in navigating volatile markets”. However, SuperRatin­gs noted superannua­tion should best be seen as a long-term performanc­e test, noting one-year returns were not the full story.

“This is particular­ly important to emphasise given the unpreceden­ted levels of volatility we have seen since the beginning of the pandemic,” SuperRatng­s said.

Hostplus topped the tables for 10-year returns, delivering 9.7 per cent, followed by Australian­Super – Balanced, which returned 9.3 per cent. However, in the past 12 months Australian­Super – Balanced members would have seen a 2.7 negative return on their retirement savings.

In third place is Australian Retirement Trust – Super Savings – Balanced, which had a 9 per cent return over the past 10 years. On average superannua­tion funds have returned 7 per cent per annum since compulsory super was establishe­d in 1992.

SuperRatin­gs executive director Kirby Rappell said while 2022 had seen some super funds hit with negative returns, “the benefits of diversific­ation have shone through” for some investment managers. “Superannua­tion is a long-term investment and patience remains key,” he said. “For those ... under 50, the recent market volatility is not expected to have any impact on their retirement.”

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