Category: SMSF
SuperStream deadline fast approaching
SMSF trustees must get ready to process rollovers via SuperStream by 1 October 2021. This means trustees will no longer able to send and receive paper rollover benefit statements and cheques between superannuation funds. SuperStream requires employers to pay superannuation and send employee information electronically in a standard format. This links the data to the...
Compensation payments: Avoiding contribution issues
Superannuation fund trustees who receive compensation from financial institutions and insurance providers must consider how receipt of these payments may impact a member’s contribution caps. A superannuation fund may have a right to seek compensation if it entered into a legal contract or agreement with a financial services provider or insurance provider, paid the fees...
Bonus Article, Super and bankruptcy: Protecting your nest egg
The Federal Government has put measures in place to help protect businesses from insolvencies stemming from the COVID-19 economic downturn. Yet not all businesses will come through to the other side and bankruptcy will be a reality for some. So, what happens to super benefits (ie, lump sums and pensions) when a superannuation fund member...
SMSFs and property development: Emerging risks
There has been an increase in the number of SMSFs entering into arrangements where real property is purchased and developed to subsequently be sold or rented out. Such investments can help the fund build up its wealth more quickly than other forms, and from a tax standpoint, any rent or eventual capital gain may enjoy...
What the new Your Future, Your Super means for you
Recent legislative reforms to the superannuation arena are set to change the retirement savings landscape for many Australians. The Federal Government says the Your Future, Your Super reforms will help ensure superannuation works in the best financial interests of all Australians by removing unnecessary waste, increasing accountability and transparency, and providing more flexibility for families...
Steps to take when winding up your SMSF
There will most likely come a time when your SMSF will need to be wound up, with a change in members, the fund’s finances, perhaps separation or other family reasons among the many reasons why winding up the fund becomes necessary. For example, the reasons to wind up an SMSF could include: there are no...
The ATO’s eligibility requirements for SMSF trustees or directors
All members of a self-managed super fund (SMSF) must be individual trustees or directors of the fund’s corporate trustee. Anyone 18 years old or over can be a trustee or director of a super fund as long as they’re not under a legal disability (such as mental incapacity) or a disqualified person. But other eligibility factors...
Evidencing SMSF property valuations
The ATO recently clarified the evidence that is required to support real property valuations within SMSFs, particularly in light of the unique challenges brought about by COVID-19. Under SMSF regulations, assets must be valued at market value in an SMSF’s accounts and financial statements each year. SMSF auditors need to be in possession of sufficient...
Managing your superannuation transfer balance account
Most people think of retirement as a time to put your feet up and relax, but it can also be a time when pre-retirees and retirees alike actually need to flex the grey matter. With all the rules and regulations swirling around the superannuation sector these days, it’s not unusual for those nearing retirement to...
The SMSF sector has been growing by $62,400 every minute
The latest annual statistical report from APRA has been released, covering the 2020 income year but only made public at the end of January 2021. Total superannuation industry assets were $2.9 trillion as at 30 June 2020. Of this total, $1.9 trillion was held by APRA-regulated superannuation entities and $0.7 trillion was held by self-managed...