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How to select investments for your super pension

No matter whether you’re about to start your first super pension or you’re years down the road, selecting and maintaining the right mix of investments is essential.

A misstep could mean less retirement income, running out of savings too quickly or more risk than you’re comfortable with.

In a typical situation, up to 60% of the money you withdraw from super during your retirement comes from investment earnings you receive after stopping work. Choosing your investments wisely can stretch each dollar you saved for retirement further.

Learn more about the 10/30/60 Rule.

Follow our simple guide to choosing and regularly reviewing the investments supporting your pension account.

Balancing growth potential and risk

When you’re no longer working or planning to step away soon, the knowledge that you won’t be earning income to add to your retirement savings if markets take a dip can be unsettling. You may be tempted to be more conservative with your super investments to protect your savings (and your sanity) from a crash.

However, market volatility is not the only risk that’s important to an investment decision. Retirees who flee too far towards the safety of defensive assets like cash and fixed interest are more exposed to the chance that their savings won’t grow enough to support their retirement income needs or to keep up with the increasing cost of living (inflation).

Including growth assets (shares, property and alternatives) in your investment portfolio improves your chances of better long-term returns, but increases volatility along the way.

The first step when choosing appropriate investments for your pension is to determine the level of risk that is appropriate for you, based on your timeframe for investing and how well you can tolerate volatility in your returns.

Learn more about your risk profile.

Product selection

After getting to grips with your risk profile, you should have a better understanding of the proportion of your savings you’re comfortable allocating to growth assets.

Before making final investment decisions, it’s important to consider the type(s) of pension you have chosen (or will choose) to invest your superannuation in.

Simple account-based pensions

The most common type of super pension held by Australians is a simple account-based pension. These accounts allow you to choose how your entire account balance is invested and which investments should be sold to provide for your pension payments (if you have selected more than one investment option).

If you will be using a simple account-based pension for all your super, you can choose a mix of investment options that will suit your risk profile and consider a bucket strategy to avoid selling growth assets to finance your withdrawals.

Learn more about the bucket strategy.

Example – simple account-based pension

Lorraine, aged 66, has $500,000 in super and is about to start an account-based pension.

After considering her risk profile, Lorraine has decided that an allocation of approximately 70% to growth assets and 30% to defensive investments suits her attitude to risk and her goals.

She plans to withdraw the minimum from her pension. Based on her current age, the minimum withdrawal is 5% of her balance per year.

Lorraine chooses to invest 10% of her balance in her fund’s cash option to provide her first two years of withdrawals. She invests the remainder into her fund’s growth option. This option targets an asset allocation of 80% growth and 20% defensive investments.

When the two options are combined, her overall portfolio reflects an allocation of 72% to growth and 28% to defensive assets, which suits Lorraine. This breakdown is illustrated in the table below.

Option Growth Defensive
Cash (10% – $50,000) $0 $50,000
Growth (90% – $450,000) $360,000 $90,000
Total $360,000 (72%) $140,000 (28%)

On her application form, Lorraine chooses to allocate 90% of her investment to the growth option and 10% to the cash option. She indicates that 100% of her pension payments should be drawn from the cash option.

Lifetime pensions (other than defined benefits)

Another option is to use some of your super to purchase a lifetime pension. These products guarantee to provide income for life and can result in a higher rate of Age Pension, depending on your circumstances.

Some of these products are investment-linked, providing income that varies with the return of the underlying investments, while others have annual income payments indexed to increase with inflation. In an investment-linked product, you may have the option to choose an investment option, or there may be a single pool of assets managed by the provider with no room for individual choice.

Most investment-linked lifetime products don’t have an account balance. Instead, your chosen investment, or the return of the provider’s pool of assets, determines how your annual pension changes from one year to the next. However, there is at least one lifetime product available that is account-based, allowing you to see and invest your balance as you choose.

If you will be using a lifetime pension for part of your super savings, you should consider the assets it exposes you to when ensuring your overall allocation suits your risk profile.

Example – partial allocation to CPI-linked lifetime pension

Dragan, aged 65, has $660,000 in super.

After considering his risk profile and goals, he feels an overall allocation of 60% growth assets and 40% defensive investments suits him.

Dragan has chosen to invest one-third of his savings ($220,000) into a lifetime pension that provides income indexed annually to CPI. This is considered a 100% defensive investment since income is guaranteed for life and will not fluctuate in response to movements in investment markets, but will simply increase annually in response to rising prices.

He will invest the remainder of his super in a simple account-based pension. To achieve his target asset allocation, Dragan calculates he needs to invest a total of $264,000 in defensive assets (40% x $660,000). That’s a further $44,000 on top of his lifetime pension. This means 10% of the $440,000 that will be placed in the account-based pension can be invested defensively and the remaining 90% can be allocated to growth assets.

Example – partial allocation to investment-linked lifetime pension

Melody, aged 70, has $400,000 in super.

After considering her risk profile and goals, she initially thinks an asset allocation of 50% growth and 50% defensive investments would suit her.

Melody chooses to invest half her savings in a lifetime super pension with pooled investments in a balanced portfolio of 70% growth and 30% defensive investments. The income from this product can go up or down from one year to the next, but is expected to increase in most years.

The remainder of her savings will be invested in a simple account-based pension. To achieve her target asset allocation, Melody would need to invest a total of $200,000 in defensive assets. Her lifetime pension has already allocated $60,000 (30% of $200,000), leaving $140,000 or 70% of her $200,000 investment to be allocated defensively in her account-based pension.

Melody selects her fund’s conservative investment option that has her required 70% defensive and 30% growth allocation.

When combined, her two pensions have a total asset allocation that matches her desired 50/50 split between growth and defensive investments.

Although the lifetime pension has a higher weighting to growth assets, there is no risk of Melody’s savings running out in that product because income is guaranteed to be paid for life. This additional security may offer the peace of mind she needs to be confident to reinvest her account-based pension with more growth assets in the future.

Defined benefit pensions

Some super funds pay a guaranteed pension for life instead of, or in addition to, an account balance at retirement. These defined benefit pensions are usually annually indexed to keep pace with inflation and often provide continuing income to a spouse after the member dies.

If you’re lucky enough to be entitled to a defined benefit pension, that benefit should be considered when you’re choosing a suitable asset allocation for any remaining savings you will be investing in super pensions.

Example – defined benefit pension

Greg has a defined benefit pension that guarantees him an income of $78,000 per year for life, indexed to CPI. If he dies before his spouse, she will continue to receive two-thirds of the pension for her lifetime after his death.

He also has savings in another super account of $300,000 that he will use to start a simple account-based pension and his wife Lorraine has $300,000 of her own.

Since they can comfortably live on his defined benefit pension alone and it is guaranteed, Greg and Lorraine feel confident to invest their account-based pensions almost entirely in growth assets. They choose to place 90% of their investment in a mix of shares and 10% in cash for withdrawals.

What investment options do pension products offer?

After choosing the pension product(s) you will use and working out the appropriate asset allocation in any product you’ve selected that allows you to choose how your money is invested, the next step is selecting investment options from your fund’s menu that fit that allocation.

One factor when choosing investment options is deciding whether you would prefer an active or passive investment approach.

Active management means the fund’s investment managers choose investments based on their research and expertise. Indexed options, also known as passive investments, track the allocation of an underlying index, rather than only the investments that managers have selected. For example, the Australian shares portion of an indexed balanced fund may track the ASX 200.

Indexed options have lower investment fees than actively managed funds. Advocates for active management say that it can generate higher returns to compensate for the additional cost, but there’s not much evidence to support this claim.

Learn more about indexed options.

Super funds generally offer three main types of investment options when you start a pension:

  1. Pre-mixed options
  2. Single sector options
  3. Direct investments.

If you want to choose indexed options, look for the keywords ‘indexed’ or ‘passive’ in the investment option’s name. Not all super funds offer indexed options in all the categories.

1. Pre-mixed options

Pre-mixed options are invested in a diversified combination of assets such as shares, property, infrastructure, fixed interest and cash.

These options are usually categorised by the proportion allocated to growth assets and labelled as High Growth, Growth, Balanced or Conservative/Capital Stable.

Your fund may also offer some pre-mixed options with a sustainable investment focus.

Learn more about how to make your super more socially aware.

If you don’t choose an investment option (or options) for your pension, your fund will commonly use one of its actively managed pre-mixed options as the default.

Need to know

Super funds and ratings agencies don’t have a consistent rule for naming investment options and categories. One fund’s Balanced option could fall into a rating agency’s Growth category or match the asset allocation of an option named ‘Aggressive’ at another super fund.

Always check the target level of growth assets in the investment option you are considering BEFORE investing your super. Don’t rely solely on the option’s name.

Learn more about the different names used for investment options.

2. Single sector options

These options reflect a single asset class such as Australian or international shares, global property, global fixed interest and cash. If your fund doesn’t offer indexed pre-mixed options, you may find they do provide indexed single-sector choices.

You can mix single-sector options together to reach your target asset allocation and choose which of them to withdraw your pension payments from.

It’s also common for retirees using a bucket strategy to choose a pre-mixed option for most of their account balance, but reserve some in the cash single sector option for their pension payments.

3. Direct investments

These investment options offer a selection of direct investments to choose from, including direct shares, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), term deposits and listed investment companies (LICs). If you owned direct investments through your super fund prior to retirement, you may be able to start your super pension without having to sell and repurchase your investments when you retire.

Direct investment options are generally only suitable if you have experience investing your own assets and want to spend the time required to successfully manage your own pension portfolio.

Regular review/rebalancing

Investing for retirement is not ‘set and forget’, particularly when you have chosen more than one investment option or retirement income product.

When you’ve got multiple investments, the weighting of each one will change over time as investment returns accumulate and you make withdrawals.

Your attitude to risk may also change as you age, and so does your timeframe for future investing.

Once your pension accounts are set up, take the time to review your strategy at least once a year and make any adjustments as needed.

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IMPORTANT: All information on SuperGuide is general in nature only and does not take into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. You should consider whether any information on SuperGuide is appropriate to you before acting on it. If SuperGuide refers to a financial product you should obtain the relevant product disclosure statement (PDS) or seek personal financial advice before making any investment decisions. Comments provided by readers that may include information relating to tax, superannuation or other rules cannot be relied upon as advice. SuperGuide does not verify the information provided within comments from readers. Learn more

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Response

  1. ROSS YOUNG Avatar
    ROSS YOUNG

    don’t forget to check the cost – so called management expense ratio of the investment base you are considering. Typically the actively managed ‘high growth’ options are going to cost you a higher percentage of your investment. There’s a fair chance the returns will be more volatile and may do no better overall than a base that is more passively managed. You need to read the product disclosure info supplied by your super fund to get an understanding of how your money is going to be managed under the option you are thinking about, starting with whether managed in house or contracted to an external fund manager.

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