evlPanda said...
<rant>
1. Your super fund is not guaranteed. I mean the actual dollars if the super fund collapses, like Babcock & Brown. This is not unlikely.
Funds collapsing happens because of leveraging - ie borrowing money to invest, which increases both returns (if the market rises) and losses (if it falls)
By law super funds are not permitted to borrow money. Ie they cannot leverage
The only way the fund can completely collapse is if every single investment they make ceases to exist. Two possible ways:
1. all the eggs in one basket (usu self managed super), in which case they are idiots
2. Complete implosion of all finances, such that not one single company/bank/anything is left standing - think nuclear warfare or something. In which case how useful is a government guarantee. They wouldn't have any money either
I think your fund is safe from collapse.
Yeah, the funds have lost money. But the stock market is at the same level as in 2004. Think about it. If the stock market had not made any money at all for 5 years, people wouldn't be complaining like this. The only difference is the past five years of your super investment has bought stock when the market was higher, and then dropped. The losses are then the difference in the purchase price and current price.
If you are about to retire, this is a small proportion of your super. If you are not, you'll well and truly make it back before then
I am SO not worried about all of this.
And super is far and away the best investment most people can make with their money. It's taxed much less than your income. Think about it - a guaranteed 10% return (or whatever depending on your tax rates) immediately. Particularly if you put the money into your not-working spouse's super - then it is pretax, plus the government gives additional funds. For me, I made a 30% return overnight by doing that.
I think the small losses on my last 5 years of super contributions are worth that
No-one EVER complains about super when the funds are making money