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Performance of Australian Superannuation Funds: Efficiency, Governance and Reporting Practices Yen Bui & Sarath Delpachitra 2 Superannuation Assets Superannuation Assets versus GDP 7000 6100 6000 Billion 5000 4000 Superannuation assets 3000 GDP 2000 1000 321 411 519 547 763 1172 1065 1335 0 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2035 * Sources: APRA 2012, APRA 2011, APRA 2007 and Cooper et al. 2010. * is forecast. Superannuation Assets by Fund Type Source: APRA data (2012) Investment Return Source: OECD 2011 Investment Return by Fund Type Return and Volatility of Superannuation Funds 2002-2012 Entities Average Return Volatility Corporate 4.3% 9.7% Industry 4.5% 9.9% Public sector 4.7% 10.4% Retail 2.9% 9.6% All entities 3.8% 9.9% Source: APRA 2012 Fees & Costs Expenses to Earnings before Tax: FY 2010-2011 Source: Computed from APRA data (2012) Outsourcing Outsourcing: risk and accountability Diverse outsourcing activities: asset allocation, investment management, custody, legal, actuarial, auditing Non-profit funds: greater outsourcing activities For-profit funds: more frequent outsourcing to related party providers Governance Agency relationship: Non-expert versus professional. Members have little influence in fund strategy and activities. Members Trustees/Directors Non-Expert Principal Professional Agent Knowledge Asymmetry & Information Asymmetry Source: Developed from Sharma (1997) and Shapiro (2005). Governance To enhance fiduciary duties of trustees and to ensure trustees act for the best interests of members: Legislation (trust law, SIS Act, ASIC, etc.) Self-regulation (code of ethics/practice) Governance Multiple relationships possible multiple conflicts of interest between members and other parties. Members Shareholders Trustees/Directors Executives Service Providers Source: Developed from Sy (2008). Governance more complex relationships & more conflicts of interest more costly system less economic efficiency (relation between cost input and return output) reduction of members’ protection effect on other stakeholders Reporting & disclosures Complex and relatively comprehensive legal framework. More emphasis on prudential standards. Less emphasis on accounting standards. Similar situation with the IASB standards. AAS 25 Financial Reporting for Superannuation Plans (2005) ED 179 currently being finalised Issue date is unknown? Global: more disclosures and transparency in other asset management sectors (e.g. mutual funds) than in pension funds. Global: “Australia’s overall reporting grade is C, with disclosure ranked D” (Hartge-Hazelman 2011). Reporting & disclosures Highlights from preliminary observations on 30 funds annual reports and websites: Reporting practices different between entities. Full financial statements not provided in financial reports. Full notes not provided. Little comparable data. Website information not updated. Organisational structure/trustees/director trustees’ qualifications and experiences not disclosed. Outsourcing activities, related party transactions with service providers not disclosed. Conceptual Model STRUCTURE CONDUCT PERFORMANCE Fund structure and relationships Investment activities Economic efficiency Benefits to Directors, executives, shareholders, Governance practices Governance scores members & members, external service providers Reporting practices Reporting scores stakeholders Market structure Competition & Legal framework APRA, ASIC, SG, SIS, AASB Governance and fund strategy Developed from Mason 1939; Britton, Clark & Ball 1992; Clement, Dale and Drew 2007 Research Questions 1. To what extent do Australian superannuation funds operate efficiently? 2. How do governance practices affect the efficiency of Australian superannuation funds? 3. Is there a positive relationship between efficiency and reporting practices of Australian superannuation funds? Research Design Large APRA-regulated funds (~ 90% of total super assets), panel data, 5-year period. Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) to estimate the relative efficiency of individual funds. Governance and reporting practices to be quantified using scorecards. Tobit/OLQ regression model to test the association between DEA efficiency scores and governance and reporting scores. Data Envelopment Analysis Inputs: cost to income grouped into four categories: Investment Administration Trustees & directors Miscellaneous Outputs: Investment return Volatility Liquidity Current Developments Exposure Draft Superannuation Legislation Amendments (Bills 2011 and 2012) Further MySuper and Transparency Measures Trustee Obligations and Prudential Standards MySuper Core Provisions Draft Prudential Standards Operational Risk Financial Requirement Defined Benefit Matters Insurance in Superannuation Conflicts of Interest Investment Governance Governance Practices Scorecards, 1 to 10 grading scale Basis for the construction of the scorecards: 2009 OECD Guidelines for pension fund governance 2010 ASX Governance principles 2011 & 2012 Bills for superannuation legislation amendments Current literature Criteria: fund mission/objectives, accountability, risk management and performance strategy/policies Governance Practices Scorecards Governance structure/Board characteristics: Trustees/director trustees qualifications and experience Member representatives Independence of directors Division of oversight and operational responsibilities Presence of specific committees. Governance mechanism/Board and fund practices: Fund mission and objectives Trustee practice/ethics code (self-regulation) Selection policies of trustees, directors, members Policies for selection/monitoring: outsourcing, external service providers, related party transactions Risk (return, volatility, liquidity and fraud) Cost control/improvement Investment strategy (life cycle) Insurance Reporting Practices Scorecards, 1 to 10 grading scale Basis for the construction of the scorecards: 2010 IASB Framework for financial reporting 2009 OECD Guidelines for pension fund governance 2011 & 2012 Bills for superannuation legislation amendments Current literature/observations Criteria: relevance, comparability and transparency. Reporting Practices Scorecards Reporting practices: Financial statements and notes Comparable financial information for multiple periods Communication with members (frequency and timeliness) Disclosure practices: Trustees, director trustees, executives Criteria in selection of trustees Rights and obligations of relevant parties (including service providers) Risk management strategy (return, volatility, liquidity and fraud) Investment strategy and investment schemes (timely update) Cost control strategy and disclosure Promotion and marketing costs (retail funds) Next Steps Completing data collection Finalising scorecards Preliminary results: Q3-Q4 2013