Weekend Herald

Big Kiwisaver providers set to take Mighty River plunge

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by Tamsyn Parker tamsyn. parker@ nzherald. co. nz Some of the largest KiwiSaver providers are already committed to buying shares in the soon to be floated energy company Mighty River Power.

ASB, Westpac and Fisher Funds — which control more than 40 per cent of the $ 15.4 billion invested in KiwiSaver — all say they will buy shares in the company.

Blair Turnbull, general manager wealth and insurance at ASB, said its KiwiSaver scheme used an indextrack­ing approach which followed the NZX 50 Index.

‘‘ Given the expected size of the i ssue, we anticipate that MRP will enter the NZX 50 index as soon as the NZX index rules allow. The ASB KiwiSaver scheme will participat­e as a consequenc­e,’’ Turnbull said.

Mighty River Power is expected to become one of the exchange’s 10 largest companies once it lists.

A spokesman for Westpac said it expected Mighty River Power to have an initial index weighting of about 3.5 per cent to 4 per cent resulting in around 0.6 per cent of its KiwiSaver money going into the company.

‘‘ The implementa­tion of the Government’s mixed- ownership model certainly provides us with a number of interestin­g investment opportunit­ies and our funds will certainly participat­e in this process to varying degrees,’’ he said.

‘‘ At the end of the day though, our decision on how fully we participat­e will come down to whether these are attractive long- term investment­s for our customers.’’

Fisher Funds managing director Carmel Fisher said she expected to buy Mighty River Power shares for both its KiwiSaver conservati­ve and growth funds and would also invest in them for its property and infra- structure fund. ‘‘ The holding will be part of a diversifie­d portfolio so a KiwiSaver member may end up with an exposure to MRP in the order of 0.5 per cent to 1 per cent of total assets.’’

The largest KiwiSaver provider, ANZ- owned OnePath, did not wish to comment, while AMP, which took over the AXA KiwiSaver scheme, said it was still deciding whether to participat­e in the float or how many shares it would buy.

Nigel Taite, president of the Institute of Financial Advisers, said individual­s looking to buy into the Mighty River Power float should also take into account how much their KiwiSaver scheme would be investing, to ensure they did not overcommit to the stock.

‘‘ Most institutio­ns are looking to buy it,’’ Taite said.

‘‘ If people are looking at making a significan­t investment they probably should check with their KiwiSaver provider first and factor that into how many shares they should buy.’’

 ?? Picture / Sarah Ivey ?? Mighty River Power is expected to become one of the NZX 50’ s 10 biggest companies once it lists.
Picture / Sarah Ivey Mighty River Power is expected to become one of the NZX 50’ s 10 biggest companies once it lists.

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