The Post

Lack of movement on steep KiwiSaver fees prompts call for cap

- Susan Edmunds

KiwiSaver fees charged by some providers have been described as ‘‘excessive’’ by one commentato­r, who wants to see the Government impose a cap.

Sorted has launched a new Smart Investor tool, which allows people to compare investment products, including KiwiSaver funds, managed funds, bonds and shares.

A comparison of KiwiSaver funds shows the most expensive is the Booster Geared Growth Fund, which has fees of 3.45 per cent.

David Beattie, a principal at Booster, said that was affected by the structure of the fund. It borrows to buy shares, and those borrowing costs are currently included in the fee total.

‘‘However, we have now received confirmati­on from the Financial Markets Authority that the borrowing costs do not now need to be included in the total annual fund charges.’’

That would reduce the fee to about 2 per cent.

NZ Funds’ Growth Strategy Fund was in second place with fees of 2.76 per cent.

NZ Funds’ head of service developmen­t Geoff Motion said that fee was taken from the period to March 31, 2018.

‘‘Since then, NZ Funds has made a number of changes, which have resulted in an estimated fee drop of 0.87 per cent, taking our projected total fund charges for the NZ Funds Growth Strategy to 1.53 per cent.’’

QuayStreet’s Altum Fund was in third place, charging 2.6 per cent, and Aon’s Milford Active Growth Wholesale Fund in fourth with 2.27 per cent. Generate’s Focused Growth Fund charges 2.23 per cent but said fees would come down as the funds grew.

But Chris Douglas, of investment support firm My Fiduciary, said the fees were excessive.

‘‘This is a government and employer-sponsored scheme and fund managers need to take this into account when they are setting fees,’’ he said.

‘‘It is the one constant that a fund manager can control and fees can take a significan­t chunk out of a Kiwi investor’s future savings.

‘‘Much has been said and written about fees, but there has been very little change here over the years. I am definitely one of those in favour of a fee cap on KiwiSaver schemes, to ensure that investors don’t end up paying too much.’’

Ayesha Scott, a finance expert at AUT, said the fees were higher than on comparable products overseas.

‘‘It is difficult to say if fees are too high, as data on the profit margin, including how expensive it is to run a KiwiSaver fund, of KiwiSaver providers are unavailabl­e.

‘‘Without knowing how much these funds cost to run, commenting on whether fees are too high is opinion-based. In my opinion, they are high.

‘‘In saying that, KiwiSaver providers are in general private fund managers and therefore entitled to make a profit.

‘‘The best thing we as investors can do is make sure we compare based on fees and create competitio­n to push fees down across the whole industry.’’

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