News | Features
21 Dec 2025 1:52
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Business > Features

    Change Kiwisaver Default Funds – But Educate Too

    All the wrong people are ending up in KiwiSaver default funds – or are they? That depends on their financial knowledge, temperament and home ownership plans.


    Default funds are the investments that the government puts KiwiSavers into if neither they nor their employer has chosen a scheme.

    Run by big financial companies AMP, ASB, AXA, ING, Mercer and TOWER, the default funds invest only about 20 per cent in "growth" assets - mostly shares but sometimes also a bit of commercial property. The rest of the money is in conservative investments like bonds and cash.

    About a third of all KiwiSavers are in default funds. Apart from those under 18, the younger the KiwiSaver member, the more likely he or she will invest in such a fund.

    About 52 per cent of KiwiSavers aged 18 to 25 are in default funds, according to data that Government Actuary David Benison presented at Conferenz’s recent SuperFunds conference.

    The percentage falls steadily with age, to only 16 per cent for those 61 and over.

    The reason for this probably lies in KiwiSaver auto enrolment. When you take a new job, you automatically join KiwiSaver unless you opt out. Young people tend to changes jobs more often, so a much bigger proportion of young KiwiSaver members are auto enrolled than older members – who usually sign up with their current employer or approach a provider directly.

    Auto enrolment doesn’t mean you have to be in a default fund. You can choose any provider and fund you like. But auto enrolled people probably know less about investment options and so stick with the fund they have landed in. We therefore end up with default funds dominated by the young.

    Arguably, older people should dominate. Conventional wisdom says the young should invest their retirement savings heavily in growth assets.

    They have several decades to recover from any market crash, and over the long haul shares and property tend to grow faster than bonds and cash.

    With this in mind, the Capital Market Development Taskforce – of which I’m a member - has recommended a change in the "investment mandate" when the next default fund tender takes place in 2015.

    The taskforce suggests two possible new mandates. One is investing in balanced funds, which hold about 50 to 70 per cent growth assets. The other is investing in funds in which the risk is adjusted with age.

    Young savers invest mainly in riskier assets but the risk gradually decreases as savers approach retirement.

    Sounds good, but there are two complicating factors - which the taskforce noted:

    • Inexperienced investors might panic when the share or property market plunges, and their KiwiSaver account halves, or worse.

    • Many young KiwiSavers will want to withdraw some of their money to buy a first home as early as three years after they join. With such a short investment horizon, they should be in a low-risk fund.

    Neither issue needs to be a problem. KiwiSaver members can move funds whenever they wish, so anyone unhappy with a riskier default fund after 2015 could go elsewhere. Many providers offer funds with similar risk to the current default funds, and there are even lower risk options.

    However, the government would need to be certain that people in default funds got the message about the level of risk they were taking on. And I would like to see even more than that.

    It would be great if people not planning a first-home withdrawal also got the message that investment risk is not necessarily bad. Sticking with a riskier fund through thick and thin is usually a winning long-term strategy.

    © 2025 Mary Holm, NZCity

     Other Features News
     10 Sep: Spring clean your finances
     13 Aug: Plan ahead to give yourself a debt-free Christmas!
     10 Jul: Wise up to clear credit card debt
     07 May: Ways to prepare for the unexpected
     30 Mar: Time for a financial progress check
     10 Feb: Studying up on NZ Super
     10 Jan: Managing the back-to-school bills
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    A steep challenge juggling a busy calendar for incoming Black Ferns head coach Whitney Hansen More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Sport New Zealand chief executive Raelene Castle has shed light on the challenge sports administrators face between balancing transparency and confidentiality More...



     Today's News

    Living & Travel:
    One lucky Whangarei lotto player's just become a multi-millionaire five days shy of Christmas 21:56

    Entertainment:
    Bonnie Blue is set to be deported from Bali and banned from the island for a decade 21:50

    Entertainment:
    Sydney Sweeney has confirmed her "boobs [are] real" 21:20

    Christchurch:
    Four people have been injured, one seriously, following a three-vehicle crash in Dunsandel in Canterbury 21:16

    International:
    Jeffrey Epstein documents partially published by US Department of Justice — as it happened 21:06

    Skiing:
    Valentino Guseli wins snowboard halfpipe bronze at Copper Mountain World Cup 21:06

    Entertainment:
    James L. Brooks is "sure" Jack Nicholson will work again 20:50

    Law and Order:
    A first look through the Epstein files reveals celebrity snaps, police notes and a lot of Bill Clinton 20:26

    Entertainment:
    David Letterman is relieved not to be hosting a late-night talk show anymore 20:20

    International:
    Epstein files contain new photo of former prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor 20:16


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd