KiwiSaver

Volatility and Illiquidity to become KiwiSaver norm

Advisers will need to do plenty of client hand-holding as balances increasingly battle volatility and managers delve into more illiquid assets, according to research house Morningstar.

Thursday, April 10th 2025

Advisers will need to do plenty of client hand-holding as balances increasingly battle volatility and managers delve into more illiquid assets, according to research house Morningstar.

As global markets have reacted to the uncertainty of US President Trump’s tariff war, the message to members has been to keep calm and carry on, and advisers play a key role in delivering the message to clients, says Morningstar Global Data Director Greg Bunkall told advisers at the QPR Monsters in March roadshow.

“It’s really important you stay on top of why that’s happened, why they should stay invested in a particular strategy and manage their behaviours around switching and withdrawing,” he told  participants in a recent adviser event. 

The size of invested capital in KiwiSaver now outweighs the amount of money coming into the scheme, says Bunkall, and overall, portfolios have become riskier with the move to make “balanced” the default fund, and with more aggressive funds on offer in the market.

The allocation decisions KiwiSaver managers are making will have an impact on the role of the adviser tool.

“Alternatives are on the way. There is not a provider that I speak to at the moment who is not thinking about their strategy for how to get into the alternatives space with their KiwiSaver line up.”

“So portfolios will become potentially more volatile and they may become more illiquid so you have to be able to understand and explain that.”

Morningstar looks at fees in the KiwiSaver market as part of its regular research and despite competition ramping up, there’s no sign of movement.

“There’s not a lot of price pressure at the moment in KiwiSaver,” says Greg Bunkall.

“People aren’t necessarily moving to find cheaper products because it’s clearly set around that 80 basis points number as an average.

“From an advisor perspective, that 80 basis point number is something to sit in your mind to say if I’m allocating to a fund that is more than 80 basis points I just need to make sure I can defend that to a client, explain why I think that option is better for them.”

Comments

No comments yet

Most Read

SBS FirstHome Combo 4.29
Unity First Home Buyer special 4.29
Co-operative Bank - First Home Special 4.85
China Construction Bank 4.85
ICBC 4.85
TSB Special 4.89
Kiwibank Special 4.89
ASB Bank 4.89
Westpac Special 4.89
BNZ - Std 4.89
AIA - Go Home Loans 4.89
Nelson Building Society 4.93
ICBC 4.95
SBS Bank Special 4.95
China Construction Bank 4.95
Wairarapa Building Society 4.95
TSB Special 4.95
ANZ Special 4.95
ASB Bank 4.95
Kainga Ora 4.95
Westpac Special 4.95
AIA - Go Home Loans 4.95
SBS Bank Special 5.39
Westpac Special 5.39
ICBC 5.39
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 5.59
BNZ - Std 5.59
BNZ - Classic 5.59
AIA - Go Home Loans 5.59
ASB Bank 5.59
Kainga Ora 5.69
Kiwibank Special 5.79
ANZ 5.79
SBS Construction lending for FHB 3.94
AIA - Back My Build 4.44
CFML 321 Loans 4.99
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 5.95
Co-operative Bank - Standard 5.95
Heartland Bank - Online 5.99
Pepper Money Prime 6.29
Kiwibank - Offset 6.35
Kiwibank 6.35
TSB Special 6.39
Kainga Ora 6.44

More Stories

Four decades of 6-7% yearly house price growth ending

Friday, March 21st 2025

Four decades of 6-7% yearly house price growth ending

New Zealander’s reliance on property capital gains in the mid-single digits is at an end.

[TMM Podcast] Yelsa serves up “marine reserve” of property buyers

Friday, January 31st 2025

[TMM Podcast] Yelsa serves up “marine reserve” of property buyers

It’s been years in the making and former real estate agent Mike Harvey is now coming to market with his platform matching buyers and sellers, an offering he says will be a gamechanger for the industry.

Leaving last year's stumbling housing market behind

Friday, January 17th 2025

Leaving last year's stumbling housing market behind

As interest rates ease and job losses climb, New Zealand’s housing market faces a mixed year of modest growth, with conflicting forces shaping the outlook for homebuyers and investors.

Don’t bet on house prices rising faster than incomes

Wednesday, January 15th 2025

Don’t bet on house prices rising faster than incomes

Former Reserve Bank Governor and National Party leader Don Brash says there are grounds for believing that house prices may finally have ended the three-decade period when they rose significantly faster than incomes.