Australia's prudential regulator has published its first system risk stress test examining links between major banks and large superannuation funds, modelling a severe scenario that would require about A$174 billion in liquidity.
Australia's prudential regulator has published the results of its first System Risk Stress Test, a landmark exercise examining how stress could travel between the country's major banks and large superannuation funds. The information paper modelled four major banks and six large super funds against a severe scenario requiring around 174 billion Australian dollars in cumulative liquidity, equivalent to just under 16% of the funds' net assets, testing how the system would cope if member balances fell sharply and members switched investment options at the same time. Unlike traditional tests focused on a single sector, the exercise probed the interconnections between banking and superannuation, reflecting the growing scale and systemic importance of Australia's retirement savings pools. Analysts noted that the scenario has implications beyond the funds themselves, including for insurance provided through superannuation, such as default death and disability cover, whose pricing and funding arrangements assume a degree of stability in member balances and contributions. The regulator stressed the exercise was exploratory and did not imply that existing frameworks had failed. The findings are likely to inform how banks, funds and insurers manage liquidity, concentration and operational risks in a more volatile environment.
Key Points
- 1APRA published its first System Risk Stress Test of banks and superannuation funds.
- 2It modelled four major banks and six large funds against a severe liquidity scenario.
- 3The scenario required about A$174 billion in cumulative liquidity.
- 4The findings have implications for insurance provided through superannuation.
Why This Matters
The test probes hidden links between Australia's banks and its huge retirement savings pools, helping regulators and firms understand how shocks could spread and where liquidity and insurance arrangements might be tested.
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