The terms "segregated" and "pooled" (or "unsegregated") have been part of the superannuation landscape for 30 years (since superannuation was first taxed in 1988). From 1 July 2017, however, the way we think about these terms for pension funds needs to change profoundly.
Traditionally, pension funds were segregated under only two circumstances:
Being segregated (or not) was important in determining whether the fund needed an actuarial certificate.
For the last 10+ years, funds have been able to claim a full tax exemption on any income earned on segregated assets without needing an actuarial certificate. Funds holding assets that were supporting pensions but were not segregated needed an actuarial certificate to support their tax exemption.
Conceptually that did not change from 1 July 2017.
But two things did change:
Taken together the impacts are significant.
Change 1 means that a fund that is allowed to be segregated in the future (subject to Change 2!) might actually have to claim their tax exemption by breaking the year up into multiple smaller periods. For example, if the fund was entirely in pension phase from July - October, received a contribution in October and converted that contribution to pension phase in January, there might be three distinct periods with different rules for tax exemptions :
Selling a property in (say) December would potentially produce a very different result to selling the same asset for the same price two months later in February.
Change 2 means the exact opposite - funds that we may have assumed are segregated all year (or even for just part of the year) will now be considered unsegregated or pooled all year. A great example here would be a fund that had two members, all in retirement phase pensions (no accumulation accounts) where they are not allowed to segregate. Even though the fund is entirely in pension phase, an actuarial certificate (stating the obvious - that 100% of the fund's investment is exempt from tax) would be required.
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