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What exactly is an Indirect Cost Ratio?

Personal Finance & Money Asked on August 25, 2021

The Australian Superannuation fund I use has no fixed annual fee, no percentage based management fee, and no investment fee.

(The fund is EISS – link to their Product Disclosure Statement here)

Instead, the only cost seems to be the ‘Indirect Cost Ratio’, which is 1.08% for the high growth fund.

I’m having trouble understanding exactly what this cost is. From the PDS it says:

These costs are referred to as indirect costs because
these are not deducted directly from your account,
instead these costs indirectly reduce your investment
value or return. The ICR is intended to facilitate
comparisons of products across superannuation funds.

I’m having trouble understanding what exactly this is.

Specifically – should I be treating this cost as something that occurs year on year on the total or my balance, or as something to occurs as the money enters the super fund?

One Answer

The ICR is your annual fees as a percentage of the balance of your capital in the fund. The ICR provides a way for you to compare the fees associated with different retail funds.

You can then compare that to what industry fund fees are, as in gerenral industry funds have lower fees than retail funds. An example of an industry fund is Australian Super.

Answered by Victor on August 25, 2021

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