Issue
Has a trustee of a self managed superannuation fund (SMSF) contravened the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 (SISA) by investing in CFDs?
Decision
No. The trustee of an SMSF has not contravened the SISA by investing in CFDs where they have not deposited fund assets with the CFD provider.
Facts
CFDs are synthetic financial products that enable the investor to access the price movement in shares and other instruments such as stock indices, stock options, currencies and futures contracts without owning the underlying product.
When a CFD is opened the investor pays a deposit into a CFD bank account and may be required to make additional margin payments to cover running losses on open positions. CFDs have a leveraging effect with consequent exposure to potentially large gains and losses stemming from exposure to short term financial risk in relation to a relatively small deposit.
The trustee of an SMSF has invested in CFDs.
The investment is for hedging purposes in accordance with the fund's investment strategy.
Under the product disclosure statement the CFD provider may, under a related agreement, permit an investor to deposit assets with the provider as security against their obligations to pay deposits or margins. The trustee has not entered into any such agreement and has not granted a charge over any fund assets in relation to the obligations to make payments under the CFD.
Reasons for Decision
No provision of the SISA or the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Regulations 1994 (SISR) specifically prohibits trustees of SMSFs from investing in CFDs.
There is no loan between the CFD provider and the SMSF trustee and therefore no contravention of the prohibition on borrowing by trustees in section 67 of the SISA. The requirement to pay a deposit and meet margin calls does not represent borrowing, they are rather contractual liabilities to make payments if and when required and are not repayments ( Prime Wheat Association Ltd v. Chief Commissioner of Stamp Duties (NSW) 97 ATC 5015; (1997) 37 ATR 479). The obligations in relation to CFDs are distinguished from margin lending through a broker's margin account in relation to the purchase of shares by an SMSF, which does represent a prohibited borrowing under the SISA.
The operation of the CFD bank account and the obligation to pay deposits and margins does not create a charge over any assets of the fund. The parties are relying on the contract and not on any security interest to be created by the contract ( White v. Conroy (1921) 21 SR (NSW) 257; (1921) 38 WN (NSW) 63, Berrington v. Evans (1839) 3 Y & C Ex 384; 160 ER 73). Under the CFD, the monies in the CFD bank account are the property of the CFD provider and the fund (investor) has no beneficial interest in the account. (Trustees need to examine individual product disclosure statements and contracts to ensure that there is no charge made over an asset as prohibited in regulation 13.14 of the SISR and that all requirements of the SISR and SISA are adhered to.)
The trustee has not entered into any collateral agreement to the CFD that places a charge over any asset of the fund.
The investment is in accordance with the fund's investment strategy as required under paragraph 52(2)(f) of the SISA and regulation 4.09 of the SISR.