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SMSFs are a better bet than rival super funds; Shell sells its stake in Woodside; Midday roundup

Self-managed super funds have significantly outperformed their APRA-regulated rivals in six out of the past eight years, reports the Australian. A report from National Australia Bank shows that on average SMSFs had beaten APRA-regulated funds by 22.5% over the period, after paying all costs. The numbers indicate a $500,000 investment in an SMSF at the […]
Kirsten Robb
Kirsten Robb
SMSFs are a better bet than rival super funds; Shell sells its stake in Woodside; Midday roundup

Self-managed super funds have significantly outperformed their APRA-regulated rivals in six out of the past eight years, reports the Australian.

A report from National Australia Bank shows that on average SMSFs had beaten APRA-regulated funds by 22.5% over the period, after paying all costs.

The numbers indicate a $500,000 investment in an SMSF at the start of the 2004-05 financial year would have returned $345,571 net by the end of the 2012 financial year, compared with the average APRA-regulated fund returning $190,100 net.

Recent figures from the Australian Taxation Office show SMSFs have grown by 26.5% to reach more than 1 million members.

The SMSF Professionalsโ€™ Association of Australia (SPAA) chief executive Andrea Slattery said recently: โ€œThe number of trustees and members exceeding 1 million is an important milestone for the SMSF industry, clearly demonstrating that there is a growing number of people wanting to take direct responsibility for their retirement savingsโ€.

David Gall, executive general manager of banking and wealth solutions at NAB, told the Australian the results showed SMSFs were not a one-hit wonder.

Shell sells its stake in Woodside

Oil giant Shell has sold part of its stake in Woodside Petroleum for $5.3 billion, reports Fairfax.

Shell announced today it was selling 19% of its stake in the Perth-based oil and gas company, or 78.27 million shares, through an underwritten sell-down to investors and Woodside.

Woodside shares, which closed on Monday at $42.85, went into a trading halt this morning to allow Shell to sell.

The company has now reduced its holding from 23% to just 4.5%, with Woodside buying back half of the shares.

Aussie stocks down on open

Australian stocks have opened lower this morning, despite Wall Stโ€™s slight lift overnight.

โ€œThere was little change in the level of major US equity indices overnight, and certainly not enough to put the ASX 200 in a position to begin clawing back the 100 points it has lost in the last couple of weeks,โ€ says Scott Schuberg, chief executive of Rivkin.

The S&P/ASX200 was down 10.2 points to 5402.1 points at 11:55am AEDT. On Monday, the Dow Jones closed 5.27 points higher, up 0.03% to 16,781.0 points.