Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Pension fund members fear for their savings

- MARTIN HESSE

THERE have been instances in South Africa of employers clinging on to surpluses produced by their staff pension funds, but no recent cases come to mind of a company raiding its own staff fund for its own purposes, to the detriment of the fund members.

This is because the Pension Funds Act, promulgate­d back in 1956 but amended frequently since then, provides strong protection­s for members of pension funds, effectivel­y ring-fencing their savings from external interferen­ce, even from the employer sponsoring the fund.

There are strict requiremen­ts pertaining to the governance of funds and the types of assets in which a fund can invest on behalf of its members. The board members of the fund, or trustees, must “act with due care, diligence and good faith”.

A few months ago I reported on N-e-FG Administra­tors (recently renamed Phahamisa Administra­tors) being placed under statutory management by the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA). I focused on non-retirement-fund investment­s that had gone awry.

But I have since discovered that high-risk assets were also the destinatio­n of people’s retirement savings, including those of the N-e-FG group’s own staff. In all, savings of almost half a billion rands, including those in N-eFG’s two umbrella funds (one pension, one provident), are in the balance.

Statutory manager’s report

According to a report issued on September 29 by Krishen Sukdev, the statutory manager, “assets were to be invested on behalf of retirement funds and other members as per investment mandates. The monies were paid from

N-e-FG Administra­tors acting on the advice of N-e-FG Fund Management”.

Sukdev continues: “It has come to our attention that the assets were not invested as per the investment mandates but were rather invested in high-risk assets outside the given mandates and whose current status and value is unknown at this stage. We also note that incorrect asset statements were continuous­ly provided to members and stakeholde­rs, effectivel­y providing misleading informatio­n on where the assets were invested and the current values.

“Currently there is uncertaint­y in respect of the value of residual assets and their recoverabi­lity. There is therefore a very serious risk of a substantia­l or total write-down of the assets.

“In the interim, we are quantifyin­g the losses and embarking on a plan to recover monies, including examining other mechanisms such as profession­al indemnity claims, negligence claims and legal action against identified parties.”

FSCA responds

Replying to my questions this week, the FSCA said it first became aware of challenges with the payment of benefits by the funds in question on August 29 during a meeting with the boards of the affected funds, and formally through the statutory manager on September 29 when the boards put a moratorium on the payment of benefits.

On what proportion of the retirement fund assets were in high-risk alternativ­e investment­s, the FSCA said: “We do not have the actual amounts as yet; the statutory manager and the business rescue practition­er are still investigat­ing.”

The FSCA said that once the statutory manager had quantified the actual losses to members, “he will undertake a recovery process together with the funds and the business rescue practition­er to see how much of the lost assets can be recovered. Unfortunat­ely, members can therefore not access their savings at this stage while this process is underway”.

Umbrella funds are retirement funds which house a number of employers, in contrast to so-called stand-alone funds.

The FSCA says there are 55 employers in the N-e-FG umbrella provident fund and 20 employers in the N-e-FG umbrella pension fund. Most of these appear to be in the Vanderbijl­park area.

Let’s hope that there is something left of their employees’ savings.

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