The Virgin Investor

Hi Scott

We are pretty excited that our 16-year-old daughter is about to start her first job. Now to work out which super fund for her to join! Following the advice in your book, we have started the process of searching for a low-cost fund. I like the look of Virgin Money Super, which charges a $58 admin fee plus 0.39% of the balance per annum. My concern is that it is a new fund and the investment options are all high risk, not to mention that Virgin Atlantic filed for ‘Chapter 11’ (hopefully not all the Virgin-branded businesses will meet the same fate). Would appreciate your advice.

Daniel


Hi Daniel,

Virgin Atlantic is not the same as Virgin Money. It’s just another one of Richard Branson’s many Virgin brand extensions. (He once tried Virgin Brides — a wedding dress business that didn’t survive its honeymoon). Virgin Money is actually owned 100% by the Bank of Queensland.

Which is kind of confusing, right?

Well, try looking at their fee structure!

They’re actually higher than you state: you left off the investment fee (0.116%) and indirect fees (0.09%).

But don’t feel bad for missing these details.

The fact is super is bloody confusing … and that’s exactly how the industry likes it.

You’re an awesome, well-meaning dad trying to help out your kid, and it’s a disgrace that it’s this hard.

Thankfully, in last year’s budget the Government announced they’re building a new comparison tool called ‘YourSuper’ which is slated to be available by 1 July this year.

So, for now, I’d probably stick with her default fund, and then when YourSuper is launched I’d encourage you to cut the apron strings and let your daughter select her own super fund using it.

You could even bribe her with a new pair of shoes if she can find a good high-growth option in a low-cost fund. Because the money she saves getting this right will eventually buy her a whole new wardrobe.

Scott.

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