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Garnett Hollier
- Brighter Super as a brand is two years old – but the fund itself is 60 years old,
following a recent three-way merger. We are proud of our Queensland heritage, with 75% of our members living and working in the state.
- We are a long-term investor, with $32 billion in funds under management – making
Brighter Super the 16th largest pension fund in the country and the 271st globally.
- Last year’s economic outlook saw several headwinds – but this year we are seeing
strong tailwinds and opportunities. These include:
- The 2032 Olympics, which provides a major opportunity to leverage the Brisbane
brand, boost tourism and economic activity.
- Strong infrastructure demand – with $94 billion expected to be spent over the next
four years, driven by projects like the Cross River Rail and pedestrian bridges.
- Population growth – which will be boosted by interstate migration and increase
demand for essential services and infrastructure.
- However, we must address the key challenge of housing, which is essential for
handling population growth.
- Finally, natural resources – including projects tied to the Queensland Energy and
Jobs Plan – is another significant opportunity. This sector will be critical for meeting Queensland’s renewable energy targets of 50% by 2030 and 70% by 2032.
- However, the confluence of these opportunities and developments creates a risk –
especially around labour, materials and construction which will lead to cost pressures if not managed.
- As such, balancing policy levers will be key to seizing the opportunities ahead.
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Dr Merriden Varrall
- Queensland’s economy cannot be considered separately from the broader
geopolitical context and risks we are currently seeing play out.
- Australia is a trading nation – and Queensland is a trading state with a diversified
but relatively exposed economy – so it is critical for Queensland’s economic future to have a stable and predictable trading environment.
- This includes respected rules, stable markets and a growing middle class to buy
Australian products – as well as stable and secure supply chains.
- This is being challenged by geopolitical volatility as trade and investment are
becoming tools of power and security.
- This can be thought about as strategic and systemic competition:
- Strategic competition considers who has the most power and influence; and
- Systemic competition considers the shape and nature of the very system.
- For example, geopolitical volatility isn’t just about one country trying to be more
powerful than another, but also about shaping the international system itself.
- Some developing or emerging countries are challenging the current order.
Although these countries don’t share a unified vision, they are challenging the predominant liberalised, U.S.-led world order – which is what Queensland relies on in order to thrive.
- Trade and investment are increasingly being used as tools of competition, or
‘weaponised’. While we have seen an ‘offensive’ component through the use of trade and investment barriers, a growing number of governments are also using ‘defensive’ components to protect their national interests through increasing onshoring, friendshoring and friendsourcing, particularly in critical sectors – and the definition of critical is expanding.
- Protectionism is rising – including in the US, which is now pursuing “Made in America”
instead of trade liberalisation. This is a clear reversal of logic from global openness in decades past.
- While businesses have largely followed economic logic and will likely continue doing
so – rather than incorporate this geopolitical risk aversion – governments are intervening more in strategic areas like critical minerals which will have an impact on private investment.
- The key considerations for Queensland in the near-term are the upcoming U.S.
election – and the potential for internal disruption in the U.S. to drive further protectionism and more trade restrictions. This is because the U.S. is the leading foreign investor in Australia.
- However, industries will be affected differently. Change may bring opportunities if
businesses and industry are prepared to take advantage of this. Businesses should be undertaking scenario modelling, dynamic risk assessments and tracking geopolitical trends to find these opportunities.
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Richard Yetsenga
- ANZ operates in 29 markets and recently acquired over a million customers through the
Suncorp deal.
- Risks and opportunities can often become conflated – especially in the geopolitical
space – as change can be both a risk and an opportunity.
- For Queensland, the economic risk from outside Australia centres around China. While
some may argue the economic issues in China are cyclical or that policies can change the trajectory, the country is actually facing structural issues from its demographics, debt levels, and its role as the world’s largest trading nation in a world trading less. These are significant constraints which cannot be easily resolved. This means that as they bind, the economy will slow.
- China’s slowing economy is freeing up capital, benefiting countries like Singapore,
Vietnam and India.
- There is a clear shift in Asia’s focus, and Australia’s engagement with ASEAN
reflects this.
- For Queensland, it’s no longer just about one customer (China); but there are now
multiple opportunities across Asia.
- Another risk for Queensland is not taking full advantage of our opportunities, like
the Olympics and the pipeline of infrastructure projects. However, this isn’t just a Queensland problem as other parts of Australia face it too.
- The final challenge is housing and migration: Brisbane’s median dwelling price is
now higher than Melbourne’s, which is affecting migration flows into Queensland. Migration is slowing, and that will have an impact on both demand for sectors and the labour supply.
- Housing remains the biggest intergenerational challenge. There is no single
solution to it, and Australia’s 11 million dwellings for 27 million people suggest it’s more of an allocation problem than a shortage.
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Can Super play a role in housing investment, and is Brighter Super investing in housing?
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Garnett Hollier
- Greater levels and access to capital through superannuation may not solve the housing
issue, but superannuation funds potentially have a role in addressing housing.
- In Australia, Brighter Super have several projects, including delivering accommodation
for the Department of Defence, and an essential worker project in Parramatta.
- Our largest investments in housing are in the U.S., where the market is very different
– with 40% of rentals institutionally owned. Brighter Super are developing a 400-unit complex near Fenway Park in Boston. The economics there are favourable, with rental rates similar to Manhattan.
- We’re looking at live opportunities in Brisbane in built-to-rent and affordable housing,
but we haven’t placed any investments yet.
- One challenge is figuring out when in the cycle to invest. Turnkey developments
are ideal as they carry the least risk, but there aren’t many of those opportunities in the market.
- Taking on development risk can offer higher returns but comes with risks like high
construction costs, which are especially high in Brisbane – second only to Sydney.
- However, the fundamentals in the Australian housing market are compelling:
rental growth is high, and vacancies are low, so we are talking to fund managers about opportunities.
- For comparison, institutional investment in housing is higher in other markets, such
as 16% in Germany and 2% in the UK, whereas Australia is still almost zero. As such, there is potentially an early mover advantage in the market.
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Are you seeing any possible developments in Ukraine or the Middle East that could have economic implications for Australia and Queensland?
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Dr Merriden Varrall
- Given the level of volatility and activity, it is critical to think about everything happening
overseas. The world has adapted to a certain level of instability, especially in the Middle East and with Russia and Ukraine.
- In Ukraine, we are likely to see the war stabilise, but Russia will continue trying to take
more territory, and Ukraine will keep using drone strikes and asymmetric warfare.
- The risk of NATO getting involved more broadly has decreased, but the fundamental
issue with Russia remains; Putin’s broader goal is to challenge the liberal U.S.-led world order.
- Putin isn’t just invading Ukraine for fun; it’s part of a larger vision for Russian
expansionism, and as he gets older, he might be more desperate to achieve it.
- The instability in the Middle East poses a different challenge but is not necessarily a
threat to global order. Major powers are generally acting cautiously to avoid escalating conflicts.
- A ceasefire seems unlikely, and Palestinians are becoming more radicalised, which is
increasing the potential for terrorism within and beyond the region.
- For Australia, even though these events feel far away, there are implications like
rising costs, energy supply concerns and supply chain disruptions.
- The overall impact of these conflicts is a more fractured international system,
where rules and norms are being challenged, and trade flows are being unpredictably reshaped.
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How much are state and federal governments contributing to higher-for-longer inflation and interest rates? |
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Richard Yetsenga
- There has been spillover from the Russia-Ukraine conflict – being the effects on global
multinationals with businesses in Russia.
- This has raised questions about whether a similar situation could occur around China.
This is likely contributing to the shift of capital to other regions.
- It’s hard to pin responsibility for inflation on specific areas of fiscal policy in Australia.
While household stimulus in Queensland and federal tax cuts are meaningful, they aren’t the main reason inflation is staying high.
- Looking back over the last decade, government consumption and investment (for both
federal and state) have grown at twice the rate of GDP and three times the rate of private demand. This shows how government involvement has increased across all areas of the economy – in housing, climate change, and defence.
- Recent federal budgets added $50 billion to the defence pipeline, alongside
major infrastructure projects. These are all resource-intensive and necessarily government-driven.
- The RBA’s rate hikes, therefore, are impacting the private sector discretely, particularly
private consumption, though business investment and government activity are still strong. Additionally, Australia is very export-dependent, so those sectors remain robust.
- The weakest player in the economy is household consumption.
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Given current thematics such as critical minerals and energy transition, what opportunities does Brighter Super see across Queensland and what are you investing in?
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Garnett Hollier
- Brighter Super is exploring how to best be part of the energy transition, which is a
competitive space.
- We already have investments in wind farms – one in Queensland and one in
South Australia.
- Another investment thematic is tourism – we invest in airports, theme parks and
light rail on the Gold Coast, which all support the influx of tourists, especially around the Olympics.
- Brighter Super also invests in healthcare, which is being driven by demographic shifts.
We have a property portfolio of medical centres, including the Icon Integrated Cancer Centre in Townsville.
- We’re also exploring venture capital opportunities for Queensland companies.
- In regional Queensland, we support communities through investments like a marine
logistics business in far north Queensland, and the Central Queensland Livestock Exchange in Gracemere.
- This highlights how investments can extend beyond Southeast Queensland to regional
areas, where there are unique opportunities.
- As a mid-size fund, we can focus on smaller, impactful investments in regional
Queensland. This contrasts to larger funds which go offshore for large deals.
- We’ve committed $500 million to investments in Queensland – a 50% increase,
showing our optimism and dedication to real opportunities in the state.
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