The Gold Coast Bulletin

Funds pull off super revival

- CLIONA O’DOWD

SUPER funds staged a stunning turnaround in 2020, swinging from a 12 per cent loss in March to close out the year up 3.7 per cent, according to research house Chant West.

The sub-4 per cent return was a marked decline on the 14.7 per cent recorded in 2019 but it came after the COVID-19 crisis triggered the swiftest market correction in history.

The turnaround demonstrat­ed the industry’s “remarkable resilience”, Chant West senior investment research manager Mano Mohankumar said.

“If we take ourselves back to late March, the prospect of finishing the year up 3.7 per cent would’ve been inconceiva­ble,” he said.

Over February and March, major share markets took a beating as the COVID-19 crisis kicked off, with the median growth fund plunging 12 per cent.

But after the swift drop, markets rallied strongly, and growth funds rode the wave to surge 15.5 per cent over the remaining nine months of the year.

The positive return in 2020 represents the ninth consecutiv­e positive calendar year and the 11th over the past 12 years, Chant West said.

The top-performing growth fund over the year was Suncorp

Multi-Manager Growth, which returned 9.6 per cent compared to the ASX 300 share index’s 1.1 per cent decline over the same period.

Mr Mohankumar said 2020 highlighte­d the long-term nature of super and the importance of patience.

“Members who sat tight generally did OK,” he said. “Sadly, there were many others who panicked when markets fell and switched their investment­s to cash or a more conservati­ve option.

“Not only would they have crystallis­ed their losses, but they would also have missed out on some or all of the subsequent rebound.

“And, of course, there were those who withdrew their money from super completely to deal with temporary hardship, and they’ll now be faced with making up considerab­le lost ground.”

The other key message was the importance of diversific­ation, Mr Mohankumar said.

“Growth funds have their investment­s spread across a wide range of asset sectors, and that works to cushion the impact during periods of sharemarke­t weakness, as we saw in February and March.

“At the same time, they still have a sizeable allocation to listed shares – about 54 per cent on average – so they’re able to benefit when those markets perform well, as we saw from April to December.”

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