X
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Expert Resources
Get the latest news! Subscribe to the Money Management bulletin
  • News
    • Accounting
    • Financial Planning
    • Funds Management
    • Life/Risk
    • People & Products
    • Policy & Regulation
    • Property
    • SMSF
    • Superannuation
    • Tech
  • Investment
    • Australian Equities
    • Global Equities
    • Managed Accounts
    • Fixed Income
    • ETFs
  • Features
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Guides
    • Outsider
    • Rate The Raters
    • Top 100
  • Media
    • Events
    • Podcast
    • Webcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Investment Centre
No Results
View All Results
  • News
    • Accounting
    • Financial Planning
    • Funds Management
    • Life/Risk
    • People & Products
    • Policy & Regulation
    • Property
    • SMSF
    • Superannuation
    • Tech
  • Investment
    • Australian Equities
    • Global Equities
    • Managed Accounts
    • Fixed Income
    • ETFs
  • Features
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Guides
    • Outsider
    • Rate The Raters
    • Top 100
  • Media
    • Events
    • Podcast
    • Webcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Investment Centre
No Results
View All Results
No Results
View All Results
Home News Financial Planning

SLAB threatens self-managed super

by Julie Bennett
March 27, 2000
in Financial Planning, News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A legal technicality in the new SLAB3 legislation is threatening Australia’s 300,000+ self-managed superannuation funds (SMSF). The legislation, due to come into effect on 31 March says an employee can only be a member of the company’s SMSF if he or she is related to all director fund members.

A legal technicality in the new SLAB3 legislation is threatening Australia’s 300,000+ self-managed superannuation funds (SMSF). The legislation, due to come into effect on 31 March says an employee can only be a member of the company’s SMSF if he or she is related to all director fund members.

X

It creates some interesting scenarios – for example: a company employee, who is married to one director but has no personal relationship with the other cannot become a member of the company’s SMSF, but a spouse who has divorced one director to marry the other can – because he or she then has a relationship with both directors.

The Financial Planning Association (FPA) is calling for urgent changes to the legislation which it fears could make many funds inoperable as SMSFs by the end of March.

Chief Executive of the FPA, Michael McKenna says that if the government does not move quickly to amend the legislation, many companies will be forced to split their SMSF funds.

“Many funds may have to remove their spouse as an employee, split the DIY fund into several funds on a family-only basis or transfer the benefits of the related employee member to another fund.” A process which is unlikely to be achieved before 31 March.

ASFA’s Head of Research, Michaela Anderson says that the spirit of the legislation is to exclude employees unless those employees happen to be related to one of the directors. “If the words [in the legislation] are doing other than that then we support any change. Members shouldn’t have to be related to everyone in the fund.”

While the issue is of some concern to the Strategist Group’s Grant Abbott, he believes there are many other important issues which follow from the legislation, the most important being the trust deed.

“Advisers now really need to look at existing trust deeds. They can’t accept that they’ll cope with the new regime as they stand.”

And he warns that planners can no longer buck pass the responsibility for the trust deed to the client’s accountant or lawyer.

“The legislation says that the financial planner — along with the client’s accountant and/or lawyer – is equally responsible to see that the deed suits the purpose of the transactions.”

Failure to see that all members become trustees or directors of the corporate trustee renders the trustees — and their advisers – liable to six months’ gaol.

“The fact is that if an accountant or a financial planner knowingly allows a new member to come on board without becoming a trustee, he or she is liable for the same penalty as the trustees of the fund — and that is, six months gaol.”

Not to mention the effect on the SMSF which becomes non-complying.

“As the fund is then non-complying,” says Abbott, “its members stand to lose half of their assets in tax.” Something, he says, they may sue their advisers for.

“One of the other big things out of SLAB3 is that the ATO has taken over from APRA as the regulator,” he says. “Under the old rules, APRA used to audit funds and check them from a prudential point of view. The ATO is not into prudential regulation, it wants to see compliance with all laws and it has a budget of $29 million to audit funds. It’s starting to do target audits now and will be looking into compliance.”

Abbott says that under the new rules even one minor breach of the SIS Act makes the fund automatically non-complying. “The sting in the tail for financial planners is that if a client’s fund is non-complying and it was the financial planner’s fault, the client can ask to join the ATO to file a claim for damages against the financial planner.”

Abbott’s advice is: “Look at your SMSF clients, review the trust deeds and make sure that all is AOK.”

Tags: AccountantAPRAATOChief ExecutiveComplianceDirectorFinancial PlannerFPASelf Managed Superannuation FundsSMSFSMSFsTrustee

Related Posts

Franklin Templeton closes global equity fund

by Laura Dew
December 18, 2025

Franklin Templeton is set to close its Global Long-Term Unconstrained Fund due to insufficient assets under management.  The fund was launched in 2015 but assets stand...

Avantis Investors hits $100bn milestone

by Shy-Ann Arkinstall
December 18, 2025

Avantis Investors has reported more than $10 billion growth in assets under management (AUM) in three months, making it the fifth largest active...

Bell Potter hires state managers to drive retail transformation

by Shy-Ann Arkinstall
December 18, 2025

Bell Financial Group has appointed two private wealth advisers as state managers to facilitate the transformation of its retail advice...

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

VIEW ALL
Promoted Content

Consistency is the most underrated investment strategy.

In financial markets, excitement drives headlines. Equity markets rise, fall, and recover — creating stories that capture attention. Yet sustainable...

by Industry Expert
November 5, 2025
Promoted Content

Jonathan Belz – Redefining APAC Access to US Private Assets

Winner of Executive of the Year – Funds Management 2025After years at Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse, Jonathan Belz founded...

by Staff Writer
September 11, 2025
Promoted Content

Real-Time Settlement Efficiency in Modern Crypto Wealth Management

Cryptocurrency liquidity has become a cornerstone of sophisticated wealth management strategies, with real-time settlement capabilities revolutionizing traditional investment approaches. The...

by PartnerArticle
September 4, 2025
Editorial

Relative Return: How fixed income got its defensiveness back

In this episode of Relative Return, host Laura Dew chats with Roy Keenan, co-head of fixed income at Yarra Capital...

by Laura Dew
September 4, 2025

Join our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

Podcasts

Relative Return Insider: RBA holds, Fed cuts and Santa’s set to rally

December 11, 2025

Relative Return Insider: GDP rebounds and housing squeeze getting worse

December 5, 2025

Relative Return Insider: US shares rebound, CPI spikes and super investment

November 28, 2025

Relative Return Insider: Economic shifts, political crossroads, and the digital future

November 14, 2025

Relative Return: Helping Australians retire with confidence

November 11, 2025

Relative Return Insider: RBA holds rates steady amid inflation concerns

November 6, 2025

Top Performing Funds

FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND
Fund name
3 y p.a(%)
1
DomaCom DFS Mortgage
211.38
2
Loftus Peak Global Disruption Fund Hedged
110.90
3
SGH Income Trust Dis AUD
80.01
4
Global X 21Shares Bitcoin ETF
76.11
5
Smarter Money Long-Short Credit Investor USD
67.63
Money Management provides accurate, informative and insightful editorial coverage of the Australian financial services market, with topics including taxation, managed funds, property investments, shares, risk insurance, master trusts, superannuation, margin lending, financial planning, portfolio construction, and investment strategies.

Subscribe to our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

About Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Collection Notice
  • Privacy Policy

Popular Topics

  • Financial Planning
  • Funds Management
  • Investment Insights
  • ETFs
  • People & Products
  • Policy & Regulation
  • Superannuation

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
  • News
    • All News
    • Accounting
    • Financial Planning
    • Funds Management
    • Life/Risk
    • People & Products
    • Policy & Regulation
    • Property
    • SMSF
    • Superannuation
    • Tech
  • Investment
    • All Investment
    • Australian Equities
    • ETFs
    • Fixed Income
    • Global Equities
    • Managed Accounts
  • Features
    • All Features
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Guides
    • Outsider
    • Rate The Raters
    • Top 100
  • Media
    • Events
    • Podcast
    • Webcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Investment Centre
  • Expert Resources
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited