ANZ removes membership fee from KiwiSaver funds

ANZ, one of New Zealand’s leading banking and financial services group, is to cut the $18 membership fee from its KiwiSaver funds in the latest fee reduction move announced today. The industry, which is the largest KiwiSaver provider managing $35 billion on behalf of their 650,000 KiwiSaver customers, will also reduce their management fees on its conservative funds and conservative balanced funds by 0.22 percentage points and 0.15 percentage points respectively.

A report by the Financial Markets Authority revealed KiwiSaver providers collectively earned $650.3 million in fees in the year to March 31 – a 21% rise on the previous year – after strong investment returns boosted funds under management to $81.6 billion.

The fee reduction changes will provide greater value for their KiwiSaver customers and will ultimately benefit members that are just starting out, and/or have lower balances.

Stewart Taylor, ANZ’s acting managing director, said, “We regularly review fees as we achieve greater economies of scale.” He went on to say, “A person with $20,000 invested in a conservative fund with ANZ would see their annual fee reduce from $192 to $130.” 

This is not ANZ’s first fee cut to its KiwiSaver scheme. “ANZ Investments has reduced the total fund fee for the ANZ KiwiSaver Scheme by approximately 25% since 2009. In 2019, it removed the $24 membership fee for members aged under 18, and reduced it to $18 from $24 for all other members, and the membership fee for over 65s was removed in 2020,” Taylor said.

ANZ’s fee changes were made following AMP, BNZ, and Westpac’s fee reductions. All of these changes took place in the wake of the Financial Markets Authority’s (FMA) announcement in April earlier this year, telling KiwiSaver providers that they must review their fees annually and prove they are providing value for money or face potential regulatory action.  

Clive Fernandes, director of KiwiSaver advice provider National Capital, said, “Members paying higher fees for actively managed funds should make sure that’s what they’re getting.” Members can read their provider’s ‘SIPO’ – Statement of Investment Policy and Objectives. This is usually found in the documents section of their website, says Fernandes.

ANZ’s new fee changes add extra pressure on the rest of the market, particularly for providers competing on low fees.

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