With deadly timing, the latest superannuation industry data from Treasurer Scott Morrison’s own regulator has directly contradicted his recent attack on industry superannuation funds, and again underlined how superior that sector is to retail funds run by Australia’s big banks and AMP.

Earlier this week, the Treasurer took aim at the industry super sector, lamenting to his friend Ray Hadley that industry funds refused to invest in coal mining for ideological rather than performance reasons. Morrison went on to say:

“It’s not uncommon for super funds to take a position which isn’t just about returns. I think Australians and the Prime Minister and I are frustrated that we’re not seeing more of that $2 trillion in capital which is there in Australian superannuation savings, not lining up on these sorts of transactions, whether it’s those agricultural stations or whether in fact it’s the electricity assets like Ausgrid. So there is an opportunity now, I think for them to engage in that and for example on the Ausgrid sale … I think all Australians would like to see superannuation funds invest more in our own country.”

Alas for Morrison, around 24 hours later the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority produced its quarterly superannuation performance data for June and it made for grim reading for the Treasurer. Because who should stand out as the sector with most infrastructure investment? Why, industry super funds. And which sector is the biggest investor in listed Australian infrastructure? Industry super again. The retail super sector so beloved of the Liberal Party — for which the government would do virtually anything — has so little investment in listed Australian infrastructure companies that they don’t trouble the scorers.

asset allocation super funds

So if the Treasurer thinks super funds should be investing more in local infrastructure, isn’t he actually saying retail funds should be more like industry funds? Or perhaps he can have a word to his state and territory counterparts about encouraging state and local government super funds — which make up the bulk of the public super sector — to be more like industry super. Of course, he shouldn’t be having a word to anyone about how super funds should invest; that’s not his job.

As for his argument that industry super doesn’t invest in coal — indeed, Morrison has a point. The level of industry super assets allocated to commodities, according to the APRA data, is just $37 million, which rounds to 0%. Except, based on the recent performance of mining company stocks, this is a smart move.

[Beware the real agenda on compulsory super]

Presumably Morrison wants industry funds to be more like retail funds — except, their level of assets allocated to commodities is … 0.2%, or $849 million. Or perhaps public sector funds — they allocate 0.1% to commodities. Or there are corporate funds, which allocate even less than industry funds — just $7 million in total. Why isn’t Morrison attacking corporate Australia’s in-house super funds for failing to invest in coal?

What Morrison should really be doing is encouraging every sector to maximise the returns to their members. Which would mean being like… industry super funds. They performed the strongest of the four sectors, according to the APRA data, with a rate of return of 4%, just ahead of public sector funds with 3.9%. The retail sector came stone motherless last with 1.3%. Perhaps it was its over-exposure to the poorly-performing commodities sector?

Super rates of return

In the face of the persistent underperformance by retail funds compared to industry super funds, opponents of industry super occasionally revert to spruiking self-managed super funds. SMSFs don’t appear in the APRA data because APRA doesn’t regulate them, but the Tax Office every year produces some data on their performance in the preceding financial year. The good people at Superratings helpfully crunched the most recent numbers in January to compare SMSFs with larger funds (of all kinds), showing that, since the financial crisis, in every year but one, larger funds have outperformed SMSFs — helped, of course, by the persistent strong performance of industry and public sector funds.

Unfortunately, the steady flow of evidence about the performance of industry super funds isn’t enough to abate the profound ideological loathing that the Liberal Party has for industry super, reinforced by the millions in donations the party receives from the finance sector. Expect more evidence-free ranting about industry super from Morrison and his colleagues.