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SMSF property gearing will 'end in tears'

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By Katarina Taurian
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3 minute read

The government should consider adopting similar measures to the UK’s self-invested personal pension scheme (SIPP) to avoid 'colossal' property losses, argues Tria Investment Partners principal Andrew Baker.

Speaking at a luncheon hosted by the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia yesterday, Mr Baker said the aggressive selling of property combined with gearing is cyclical in Australia. 

“It goes to the biggest pot of money around, and this time it’s SMSFs. It always ends in tears, guaranteed, every time, with colossal losses,” he said. “We already see that, it’s just coming in $10 million lots instead of $100 million.”

Mr Baker suggested looking to the UK’s SIPP scheme to “fix” the issue.

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“The UK’s SIPP structure has got this pretty right. There’s a ban on residential property, there’s a ban on personal use assets,” he said. “[It’s] very easy to do; if you did the same thing here, you would knock out 90 per cent of the problems we have.”

However, Andrew Bloore, chief executive of SMSF administration business Super IQ, suggested some of the current changes in the superannuation industry are working towards creating higher standards for those involved in the SMSF sector.

Mr Bloore noted that auditors are now required to be registered and that SMSF trustees are now subject to the ATO’s new penalty regime.

“That’s a fundamental [way] of improving the way that things operate to a standard. And provided we can get them operating to a standard, then the industry will thrive, the way it should thrive, for the right people,” Mr Bloore said.