The “rivers of gold” need a better plumbing system.
ASIC has issued a blunt warning to Australia’s A$4.5 trillion ($3.16T) pension fund industry: Invest in your systems now, or become the next cautionary tale. With the sector on track to hit A$6 trillion by 2030—surpassing the size of Australia’s banking system—regulators are concerned that operational capability is lagging behind asset growth.
📉 THE “ASX” CAUTIONARY TALE: Commissioner Simone Constant drew a sharp comparison to the ASX (Australian Securities Exchange), which was recently hit with a A$150M capital charge following years of failed software upgrades and glitches.
- The Message: “Look at the ASX for a cautionary tale on what happens when your investment and aspiration doesn’t match your role in the system.”
- The Risk: ASIC fears super funds are “looking backward,” failing to modernize governance and operations just as 2.5 million Australians prepare to retire.
🔍 APRA ON WATCH: It’s not just tech; it’s governance. APRA Deputy Chair Margaret Cole highlighted recent collapses of managed schemes (Shield, First Guardian) as proof of “deficiencies across the system.” The regulator is now targeting platform trustees for weak investment option onboarding and monitoring.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: This is the end of the “Asset Gathering” phase and the start of the “Operational Resilience” phase. When a sector becomes larger than the banking system, it invites banking-level scrutiny. The regulators are effectively saying that “legacy tech” is no longer just an IT problem; it is a systemic financial stability risk. Expect a massive capex cycle in Superannuation fintech, data governance, and middle-office automation over the next 3 years.
👇 Super Execs: Is your fund’s tech stack ready to handle the retirement drawdown phase, or is it still built for the accumulation phase?
