Stay informed Sign up for our newsletter and be the first to know.
Stay informed Sign up for our newsletter and be the first to know.
Brilliant Investment Thinking by Advisers for Advisers.
ASX
+0.33%
S&P
-1.65%
AUD
$0.69

Retirement

Share
Print

CIPR is an opportunity not a chore

CIPR is an opportunity not a chore
Share
Print

Superannuation funds need to get on the front foot and respond to the strategic challenge of developing good retirement solutions now. Although superannuation funds can follow the Government's legislative timetable to develop a Comprehensive Income Product for Retirement (CIPR) by 1 July 2022, that's hardly an optimal outcome for fund members who have retired or are making retirement plans now.

Superannuation funds need to get on the front foot and respond to the strategic challenge of developing good retirement solutions now. Although superannuation funds can follow the Government’s legislative timetable to develop a Comprehensive Income Product for Retirement (CIPR) by 1 July 2022, that’s hardly an optimal outcome for fund members who have retired or are making retirement plans now. They want a timetable dictated by their needs – not Government legislation.

It will require superannuation funds to ‘get over’ the powerful anchoring bias of an accumulation mindset to design good solutions for retired members and members in retirement-planning phase.

Superannuation funds should not view developing a CIPR as a chore, but as an opportunity to innovate free of the constraints from benchmarking and peer sensitivity that plague accumulation portfolio design.

Superannuation funds should appreciate that CIPR represents a license for fresh thinking about how to build investment portfolios that map to members’ needs and objectives, which are quite distinct in retirement. Fundamental matters like portfolio objectives, liquidity and how risk is defined are back on the table. It’s an exciting time, actually.

Although there is keen debate about the use of annuities (or other innovative longevity risk pooling solutions) in a CIPR, superannuation funds should not be distracted from thinking about clever ways their CIPR or other retirement solution can achieve their equity exposure.

Certainly, it’s clear that the investments backing a CIPR will need to have some exposure to equities or other growth assets. Superannuation funds should be looking now for different approaches, such as specific defensive or low volatility strategies and factor-based strategies that use simple construction rules to produce better-than-market income and volatility outcomes.

Other equity options include emerging markets strategies with good downside risk properties and Australian equity strategies that recognise the value of franking credits to retirees as an additional source of yield while addressing the risks of simplistic franking-tilted approaches.

Structurally, superannuation funds should also think about whether segregating their pension assets from their accumulation assets – at least for some asset classes – makes sense.

We published research earlier this year that suggests this decision should be guided by whether a super fund adopts a ‘mass production’ versus ‘mass customisation’ mindset for its retirement solution design.

Many superannuation funds are starting to commit to “fewer, deeper investment partnerships”, which is a good fit for the client-first, research-driven, collaborative approach Parametric uses as a specialist implementation manager. CIPR design offers a great opportunity for funds to act on this “deep partnership” principle by finding the right retirement solution investment partner.

All these retirement portfolio construction ideas can be scoped, modelled, adjusted and re-explored collaboratively between a super fund and investment partner if the latter has a clear sense of the fund’s guiding philosophies and the needs of its retired members.

The investment partner’s job is to design and deliver a portfolio solution that fulfils the fund’s retirement design vision, and continue to collaborate with the fund to evolve this vision and its implementation through time. It’s a continuous journey. But that journey should start now.

Paul Bouchey is the chief investment officer of Parametric, a specialist global implementation manager.

Superannuation funds need to get on the front foot and respond to the strategic challenge of developing good retirement solutions now. Although superannuation funds can follow the Government’s legislative timetable to develop a Comprehensive Income Product for Retirement (CIPR) by 1 July 2022, that’s hardly an optimal outcome for fund members who have retired or are making retirement plans now.

Share
Print

Simulating retirement outcomes using real-world market paths and Monte Carlo techniques

One of the biggest challenges in retirement planning is understanding the uncertainty of future portfolio outcomes. Average returns alone tell us very little...

Do we really want less choice for Australian retirees?

Last week's conveniently ‘leaked’ government proposal on its plans to revolutionise retirement income for all Australians has brought retirement back into...

Defined returns fund can soften retiree pain in next market turn: Atlantic House

The market will turn at some point, which puts a number of dangers in front of retirees. Australians have historically been wary of structured products, but a...

Government, not super funds, should be guiding decumulation: Grattan

The inertia that rules the retirement system means bigger ideas are needed if members are going to get the best outcome in retirement. And with millions set to...