Hawke's Bay Today

Wipeout: Losses for Kiwis in KiwiSaver

Plea for savers to hold their nerve as funds drop $1.5 billion in 3 months

- Tamsyn Parker

KiwiSaver members are being urged to hold their nerve again after a torrid start to the year in financial markets sent most funds into negative territory.

Figures from Morningsta­r show $1.536 billion was wiped off the value of KiwiSaver funds in the March quarter, dropping the total to $87.3b.

Tim Murphy, Morningsta­r director of manager selection for the AsiaPacifi­c region, said despite the fall there was “no need to panic”.

“KiwiSaver is, for the majority of people, a long-term investment. While the first quarter saw some negative returns, in the context of recent years it is a fairly minor pullback on the scale of things. That is why we highlight the 10-year returns which, despite the last quarter are all strongly positive.”

The last time sharemarke­ts fell around the world was in March 2020 at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic but within six weeks they had bounced back higher than before.

But it also prompted a sharp increase in the number of people switching KiwiSaver funds.

A report by the Financial Markets Authority found in March 2020 there was seven times the 2019 average monthly volume of switches and 70 per cent of switches were people moving to lower-risk funds.

Younger people also dominated those moving their money with members aged 26-35 making five times the number of fund switches than they normally would.

Murphy said superannua­tion investors

often saw negative returns and started to panic.

“It is usually the absolute worst time to do that.”

He said investors who switched into lower-risk funds in March and

April 2020 then missed out on one of the strongest 12-month periods of return in market history.

“The over-riding message is KiwiSaver is a long-term investment. There are going to be bumps along the road.

“Frankly in the last 10 years there have been far fewer bumps than we would have expected. Obviously there is one taking place at the moment.

“But if you have appropriat­ely chosen a KiwiSaver option in terms of your risk profile that is more aggressive, more growth oriented, then drawdowns like this are part of the cycle of investing. Markets don’t go up forever.”

He said the vast majority of people should do absolutely nothing.

Bad timing

But the downturn in markets has been bad timing for one group of investors.

The default KiwiSaver schemes switched from conservati­ve to a balanced strategy in December with around 350,000 default members moving into new funds.

Morningsta­r figures show the average return for five of those funds ranged between -5.1 per cent and -5.9 per cent for their first three months in operation.

“From a timing perspectiv­e it has proven to be unfortunat­e timing. But all the messages remain around that.

“For default investor KiwiSaver is meant to be a long-term savings vehicle and therefore exposure to higher-return-seeking assets is appropriat­e.

“To the extent there are members that aren’t comfortabl­e with that then they have the ability and the option to choose more conservati­ve settings should they wish.”

The average return for the conservati­ve category over the quarter was -3.9 per cent, for balanced funds it was -5.1 per cent and growth funds -5.7 per cent.

Aggressive funds which have the highest percentage invested in shares and property fell on average -6.5 per cent.

 ?? ?? KiwiSaver — there are going to be bumps along the road.
KiwiSaver — there are going to be bumps along the road.

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