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KiwiSaver fund performance and asset allocation policy

Huong Dieu Dang (School of Business and Economics, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand)

Pacific Accounting Review

ISSN: 0114-0582

Article publication date: 11 April 2019

Issue publication date: 17 April 2019

427

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to examine the performance and benchmark asset allocation policy of 70 KiwiSaver funds catergorised as growth, balanced or conservative over the period October 2007-June 2016. The study focuses on the sources for returns variability across time and returns variation among funds.

Design/methodology/approach

Each fund is benchmarked against a portfolio of eight indices representing eight invested asset classes. Three measures were used to examine the after-fee benchmark-adjusted performance of each fund: excess return, cumulative abnormal return and holding period returns difference. Tracking error and active share were used to capture manager’s benchmark deviation.

Findings

On average, funds underperform their respective benchmarks, with the mean quarterly excess return (after management fees) of −0.15 per cent (growth), −0.63 per cent (balanced) and −0.83 per cent (conservative). Benchmark returns variability, on average, explains 43-78 per cent of fund’s across-time returns variability, and this is primarily driven by fund’s exposures to global capital markets. Differences in benchmark policies, on average, account for 18.8-39.3 per cent of among-fund returns variation, while differences in fees and security selection may explain the rest. About 61 per cent of balanced and 47 per cent of Growth funds’ managers make selection bets against their benchmarks. There is no consistent evidence that more actively managed funds deliver higher after-fee risk-adjusted performance. Superior performance is often due to randomness.

Originality/value

This study makes use of a unique data set gathered directly from KiwiSaver managers and captures the long-term strategic asset allocation target which underlines the investment management process in reality. The study represents the first attempt to examine the impact of benchmark asset allocation policy on KiwiSaver fund’s returns variability across time and returns variation among funds.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author is grateful to William Nelson and the team at Melville Jessup Weaver for providing me the data on KiwiSaver funds and for constructive inputs. The author would also like to thank George Wu and participations at 2017 Vietnam International Conference in Finance for helpful comments. Thanks are also due to the editor Nick Nguyen and an anonymous referee for constructive suggestions.

Citation

Dieu Dang, H. (2019), "KiwiSaver fund performance and asset allocation policy", Pacific Accounting Review, Vol. 31 No. 2, pp. 232-257. https://doi.org/10.1108/PAR-06-2018-0044

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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