Seems to be OK to have a CFD bank account, and be required to make further payments if you make losses, but not OK, if you have to enter into an agreement that forces you to reserve / guarantee further fund cash / assets that the CFD provider gains recourse over?
That's pretty much it. In the first instance (56) the creation of the cash account still makes the use of the CFD product non-recourse to the assets of the SMSF. In the second instance (57) a charge has been placed over the assets of the fund to cover losses whether or not they happen to be in the client's cash account with the CFD provider doesn't matter.
I imagine the distinction between CFD's and options and futures traded on regulated exchanges is that CFD's have far less visibility and transparency.
I believe that the APRA guidelines state that a Fund must make sure that the "net exposure" must is within the investment strategy bounds.This is not advice - This is just a fool guessing.
Hi McLovin - you obviously know way more on this now than I do after killing a lazy day digging into it. But the point I was trying to make earlier and I still think it will limit the extent of use for even futures is the exposure limits in the investment strategy. ie 1 the Million account and 70% max set for equity exposure - means you would have to keep full face value exposure of the future contracts (+ any other equities the fund owns) under the 700K. or saying it another way you couldn't hold a couple of Million in future exposure just because you are able to fund it on margin. The non recourse rules might not pull you up in relation to futures but the investment strategy would and amending the investment strategy to allow for more than 100% exposure would not meet the obligations the legislation requires of an investment strategy to control and protect the funds financial position. If it sounds risky (ie a 2 million futures exposure in a 500K fund etc) you can be pretty sure you can’t do it in a SMSF.
But if the full face value of the number of contracts you want to trade is within your funds means and within the investment strategy asset allocation, then with a derivatives risk statement in place you should be able to trade to your heart’s content within the fund.
This is not advice - This is just a fool guessing.
Accordingly, in a roundabout way, the legislation and the case law come to a similar conclusion as APRA. Namely, holding derivatives in an SMSF is allowable for purposes such as hedging against risks. However, they should not be used for speculative purposes and ‘speculative purposes’ cover a lot of purposes!
Our Australian and International Shares portfolio hold share index futures. With a small percentage
of these portfolios held in cash to cover transactions, inflows and outflows, index futures are used
to provide the equivalent returns as they would if they were 100% invested, while still holding cash.
But then reading the link Ves provided there's this...
APRA agrees that derivatives can play a role in a properly diversified portfolio. They set out their views in Prudential Practice Guide SPG 200. Importantly, APRA state that they consider:…
it inappropriate for trustees to use derivatives for ‘speculation’, which … refers to investment activity that results in one or more of the following:
a. the net exposure of the fund to an asset class being outside the limits set out in the fund’s investment strategy. (Net exposure is exposure taking account of both physical and derivative exposure);
b. the risk involved for the whole portfolio being outside that which the trustee considered appropriate when it developed and approved the fund’s investment strategy;
c. the fund holding uncovered derivatives; and
d. the fund’s total portfolio being ‘geared up’ through derivatives to circumvent the limitations imposed by ss. 67, 95 and 97 of the SIS Act on borrowings.
Naturally, APRA is not the regulator of SMSFs. The Commissioner of Taxation is the regulator of SMSFs. However, the Commissioner has not released anything as directly on point as APRA’s guide. Also, the Commissioner typically tries to be consistent with APRA. Accordingly, APRA’s comments should be borne in mind. - See more at: http://www.dbalawyers.com.au/smsf-compliance/can-smsfs-invest-derivatives/#sthash.0WkWWBUe.dpuf
Conclusion
It is possible for SMSF trustees to hold derivatives. However, derivatives should only be used conservatively and not for purposes like speculation. If a financial planner has a client who wishes to speculate using derivatives, this will expose the financial planner to risk. - See more at: http://www.dbalawyers.com.au/smsf-compliance/can-smsfs-invest-derivatives/#sthash.0WkWWBUe.dpuf
I don't see the above casuing problems with gaining exposure via futures rather then directly as Australian super has done in your example.
more importantly I feel my portfolio is now the most undervalued (relatively) that it has been since 2007 - so good stored energy - but when will it be released?
The spring is doing it's thing, and yet it's only autumn!Looks like the stored energy talked about in that last equity curve update might be starting to release.
This will probably be the last update I will make here.
As I have said previously, inspirational.The 12th set of financials for the SMSF will be produced in a bit over a month. CAGR on total funds over that period is still likely to be 35%+ and with 16 years to preservation age. The snowball is starting to get ridiculous, I having trouble dreaming big enough and I don’t want the responsibility – Just some family financial security is all that we were trying to achieve.
Finally stoped procrastinating and did the books in Simplefund 360. What a heap of Crap!!! at least in comparison to the original desktop version.
This will probably be the last update I will make here.
Craft: You have done a remarkable job this year, well done.
I'm surprised by the number or transactions
and therefore assume that you are taking advantage of price rallies to sell some and then wait for the dips to buy some back. This would see you realising profits and having cash to buy in the dips.
Yep I tend to stick to a pretty small number of stocks. In fact I have a min 10(when fully invested) and Max 15 rule for the SMSF. I tend to think of my portfolio as a team and I’m the selector – new stocks have to force themselves in by being better businesses then already in the team. Although separate to this I do pick up small quantities of stocks that have the potential to make the top 15. I research better once I have even a small position – mostly they get put back down again after a bit of a feel (accounting for a few more transactions)I see that you only trade a small number of stocks that you know well.
Very interesting but not held in the SMSF - the range of possible out comes when I purchased SRX was too wide for SRX to make the SMSF team - However in hindsight (as I sit here doing my personal tax return - thanks for the distraction) I would have loved the 10% CGT rate just now.Considering the price movements in SRX this year, you've probably had a very interesting year.
There's no doubt about it. You're doing something different. Traditional portfolio management techniques won't get anywhere near this performance.
For closed positions yes - But for all you know I may have equal loses still in open positions so you shouldn't really draw too many conclusions. I won't be putting up open+close statistics because cleaver calculators like you could deduce to much that I would prefer to keep private.Craft this is phenomenal. Well done.
I knew you were the man but to this extent I was unaware.
Just so I'm spelling it out correctly:
121*17808 = $2,154768
41*766 = $31,406
Return = $2,123,362 in FY 14/15
Is that correct??:bonk:
Can I ask if there a few stocks which have been responsible for the majority of those returns? If you took out the too 3 performers, what would your returns look like?
I don’t think I’m doing anything startling – Just a long term focus on business performance. But I guess that does put me in a minority as most don’t see the businesses for the prices.
No price stops for protection here.
Probably pretty ordinary – but you can’t help but have a top three.
The 80/20 principle is alive and well in my portfolio. The top three holdings currently represent 56% of the portfolio and 81% of the open profit.
The top three represent luck – I did not envisaged when buying them that they would do better than my other picks.
I don’t have to do much to manage the ones I get lucky with – I think to the extent that I possibly add anything beyond luck, it’s in the ongoing management of my picks that don’t turn out to be so lucky and running a strategy that holds tight to a business whilst it remains a good businesses.
I'll get back to the rest of your question later.
You mentioned you haven't been adding much money to the funds since the rollover. Do you have holdings invested outside of super then? I have many years left to preservation age so I am still trying to balance things. Any insight to how you manage it would be great.
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