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Superannuation
14 July 2025 by Maja Garaca Djurdjevic

Australia’s productivity future hinges on super, ASFA warns

Australia’s superannuation system is doing more than funding retirements – it’s quietly fuelling the nation’s productivity, lifting GDP, and adding ...
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Fund managers’ Europe bet shaken by Trump’s fresh tariff threat

Fund managers who had been pinning their hopes on Europe as a relative safe haven from trade tensions are facing fresh ...

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T. Rowe Price raises risk profile amid global growth support

T. Rowe Price has modestly increased its risk appetite, upgrading its overall risk profile towards neutral as it seeks ...

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Betashares targets top spot with managed accounts merger

Betashares will merge its managed accounts business with Sydney-based InvestSense to create Trellia Wealth Partners, an ...

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Unpredictable markets spur ‘significant shift’ to active management: Invesco

Index concentration risk along with macro and political volatility has prompted many sovereign wealth funds to turn to ...

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Is political pressure driving major banks to abandon net zero coalitions?

HSBC has withdrawn from the UN-convened Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), making it the first UK bank to formally exit ...

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TAAM to close segregated accounts

  •  
By Alice Uribe
  •  
2 minute read

Treasury Asia Asset Management will close its segregated accounts to investors.

One of listed financial services company the Treasury Group's boutiques is set to close its segregated accounts to investors.

Treasury Group head of distribution Robert Sullivan said Asia-Pacific boutique investment manager Treasury Asia Asset Management (TAAM) currently has two mandates left.

"The reality is that they will be closing segregated accounts due a limited number of mandates available," Sullivan said.

However, the pooled funds outside of the segregated mandates, such as the Australia-domiciled TAAM New Asia Fund, are still open for investors.

 
 

"Asia remains a strong interest area and this has grown over the last 12 months," Sullivan said.

TAAM opened the TAAM New Asia Fund in 2005 and it can invest in all of the countries that make up the MSCI All Country Asia ex-Japan Index, including China, Hong Kong, India, Malaysia, Taiwan, the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, South Korea and Singapore.