The Productivity Commission, AFCA and more

10 min read
10 min read

Winter will be a hectic season for the superannuation industry, as it responds to the long-awaited draft report from the Productivity Commission, prepares to transition to a new dispute resolution framework, and deals with a myriad of other regulatory developments.

Productivity Commission draft report

Following a three-stage review of the superannuation system commencing in 2016, the Productivity Commission has released its draft report, Superannuation: assessing efficiency and competitiveness. The landmark report proposes substantial reforms to the industry, including a new method of allocating members to default products.

The Commission considers that Australia’s super system needs to adapt to better meet the needs of a modern workforce and a growing pool of retirees. In the Commission’s view, structural flaws—unintended multiple accounts and entrenched underperformers—currently harm a significant number of members. According to the Commission, fixing these issues could benefit members around $3.9 billion each year, with the balance for a new job entrant today lifted by $407,000 when they retire in 2064.

The Commission’s assessment of the superannuation system revealed mixed performance:

  • while some funds consistently achieve high net returns, a significant number—including some default funds—underperform markedly
  • fees remain a significant drain on net returns, even though reported fees have trended down on average
  • there are around 10 million unintended multiple accounts, which erode members’ balances through unnecessary fees and insurance
  • the system offers products and services that meet most members’ needs, but members lack access to quality, comparable information to help them find the best products
  • many members see their retirement balances eroded by duplicate or unsuitable insurance policies.

The Commission concluded that these outcomes have arisen due to inadequate competition, governance and regulation. In particular:

  • rivalry between funds in the default segment is superficial, and there are signs of unhealthy competition in the choice segment
  • the default segment outperforms the system on average, but the way members are allocated to default products leaves some exposed to the costly risk of being defaulted into an underperforming fund, eroding their super balance by retirement
  • regulations (and regulators) focus too much on funds rather than members, and subpar data and disclosure inhibit accountability to members and regulators
  • while policy initiatives have chipped away at some of the problems, more changes are needed.

To address the issues, the Commission has recommended a package of reforms, including:

  • a new default model, with members only ever allocated to a default product once, upon entering the workforce, and empowered to choose their own super product by being provided a ‘best in show’ shortlist of up to ten funds
  • an elevated threshold for MySuper authorisation, including an enhanced outcomes test
  • stronger governance rules, especially for board appointments and mergers
  • reforms to ensure funds provide insurance that is valuable to members – including strengthening the industry’s code of practice and making it enforceable
  • enabling regulators to become ‘member champions’, confidently and effectively policing trustee conduct, and collecting and using more comprehensive and member-relevant data.

Submissions on the draft report close on 13 July.

New dispute resolution framework – major developments

The government recently authorised the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) as the new external dispute resolution (EDR) body for financial services. AFCA will replace the Superannuation Complaints Tribunal (SCT) and Financial Ombudsman Service, and will commence to hear complaints from 1 November 2018. The SCT will continue to operate for a period to clear its existing caseload, but cannot accept new complaints after 31 October 2018. Financial firms, including trustees of APRA-regulated superannuation funds, are required to be members of AFCA by 21 September 2018.

AFCA has issued a draft of its proposed rules for consultation, along with draft terms of reference for the AFCA independent assessor. Once finalised, the rules will effectively form part of a contract between AFCA and its member firms. They will form a critical part of the dispute resolution framework for trustees, operating alongside provisions in the Corporations Act 2001 as amended by the Treasury Laws Amendment (Putting Consumers First – Establishment of the Australian Financial Complaints Authority) Act 2018, and regulatory guidance to be issued by ASIC.

To support the transition to the new EDR arrangements and the establishment of AFCA, ASIC has provided financial services providers with conditional disclosure relief in relation to EDR arrangements. In general terms, ASIC Corporations (AFCA Transition) Instrument 2018/447:

  • exempts providers from the requirement to give a ‘significant event notification’ under section 1017B of the Corporations Act in relation to the commencement of AFCA
  • provides transitional relief until 1 July 2019 for financial firms to update prescribed disclosure documents that are required to include reference to EDR arrangements. This covers product disclosure statements, periodic and ‘exit’ statements, financial services guides and statements to a non-member spouse in relation to a family law superannuation split.

In order to qualify for the disclosure relief, a provider must ensure that, from 1 November 2018:

  • information about the AFCA scheme and how it may be accessed (‘AFCA information’) is made available on the provider’s website
  • AFCA information is included in any document which:
    • purports to describe dispute resolution arrangements applicable to financial services provided by the provider (whether or not the document also includes other matters)
    • is made available by the provider to persons who have or may receive financial services from the provider as retail clients.
  • the documentation relating to the provider’s internal dispute resolution (IDR) procedure includes the AFCA information.

ASIC has also updated Regulatory Guide RG 165 Licensing: Internal and external dispute resolution, to reflect the relief and impose new requirements for IDR final response letters and ‘delay letters’ – letters advising that the provider has been unable to respond to a complaint or dispute within the requisite timeframe.

In particular, IDR final response letters and ‘delay letters’ issued on or after 21 September 2018 and before 1 November 2018 must refer to both the relevant predecessor EDR scheme and AFCA. Letters issued from 1 February 2019 must contain references only to AFCA. Letters issued between 1 November 2018 and 1 February 2019 may continue to include references to both schemes, provided it is clear that only AFCA can receive complaints after 1 November 2018.

Superannuation prudential framework: APRA review

APRA has launched a detailed post-implementation review of the superannuation prudential framework introduced following the 2013 Stronger Super reforms. The aim of the review is to ensure the prudential and reporting standards, and related guidance, have achieved their objectives and continue to remain fit for purpose.

To commence the review, APRA has issued:

  • an overarching discussion paper which outlines the purpose of the review and review process, and includes questions that seek feedback on the superannuation prudential fr
    amework as a whole
  • two short topic papers on governance and risk management.

Over the coming months APRA will release short consultation papers covering another four topics addressed in the prudential framework – financial requirements, operational risk and outsourcing; investments; insurance; and member flows and products.

Submissions on all the consultation papers will be due by 26 September. APRA expects to release a final report on the superannuation post-implementation review by early 2019.

Other important developments

There have also been many other important developments since the last rules and regs. The most significant of these are summarised below:

Super guarantee amnesty: Treasury Laws Amendment (2018 Superannuation Measures No 1) Bill 2018 (“2018 Superannuation Measures No 1 Bill”), introduced into Parliament on 24 May, provides for a one-off 12 month amnesty to encourage employers to self-correct historical superannuation guarantee (SG) non-compliance. Under the amnesty, penalties applicable to historical SG non-compliance will be reduced to nil, and the ATO ‘administrative component’ of the SG charge will be waived, where an employer voluntarily discloses their non-compliance to the ATO and pays an employee’s full SG entitlement (including nominal interest). Employers will also be able to claim a tax deduction for contributions made during the amnesty period.

Partial SG opt-out: the 2018 Superannuation Measures No 1 Bill also provides for higher income earners with multiple employers to partially opt-out of SG coverage, to prevent inadvertent breaches of the concessional contributions cap. The measure was announced in the 2018-19 Budget and will apply to SG quarters commencing 1 July 2018.

Integrity amendments for 2016-17 Budget reforms: the 2018 Superannuation Measures No 1 Bill also includes amendments to rules around non-arm’s length income and the ‘total superannuation balance’. The measures prevent individuals inflating fund earnings through non-arm’s length dealings. This has been used by some individuals as a strategy to increase superannuation savings in a way that is not caught by the contributions caps, particularly in light of changes to the contributions caps and the Division 293 tax on contributions following the 2016-17 Budget. The measures also amend the ‘total superannuation balance’ rules to ensure that, in certain circumstances involving limited recourse borrowing arrangements, the total value of a superannuation fund’s assets is taken into account in working out individual members’ total superannuation balances.

Compassionate grounds: the government has set 1 July 2018 as the date that regulatory responsibility for approving the release of benefits on compassionate grounds will transfer from Medicare to the ATO. The Treasury Laws Amendment (Release of Superannuation on Compassionate Grounds) Regulations 2018 have been made to streamline and improve the approval process.

Victims of crime compensation: the government has undertaken consultation on proposals to provide victims of crime with access to a perpetrator’s superannuation in certain circumstances.

APRA thematic reviews: APRA has released the findings from its recent thematic reviews into board practices in the superannuation industry, and related party arrangements for registrable superannuation entity licensees.

Employer sub-plans: ASIC has issued ASIC Corporations (Amendment) Instrument 2018/474 to further defer the application of the website disclosure rules in section 29QB of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision Act) in relation to information about employer sub-plans until 30 June 2024.

Superannuation platforms: ASIC has issued ASIC Corporations (Amendment) Instrument 2018/473 to further defer the application of the shorter product disclosure statement regime to multi-funds, superannuation platforms and hedge funds until 30 June 2022.

Retirement income covenant: The government has undertaken consultation on proposed principles for the introduction of a retirement income covenant into the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993. This follows the government’s Budget announcement that it would introduce a retirement income covenant as part of a retirement income framework, requiring trustees to develop a retirement income strategy for their members.

ATO reporting: The ATO has consulted on a draft legislative instrument setting the timeframe for a superannuation provider to give it a Member Account Transaction Service (MATS) form under the new event-based reporting framework. The MATS form is the virtual approved form that superannuation providers (excluding self-managed superannuation funds) and life insurance companies must use to report information regarding an individual’s superannuation account transactions, including contributions, to the ATO. Under the draft instrument a MATS form must generally be lodged within 10 days of a reportable event, however member contribution balance amounts must be reported no later than 31 October after the end of the financial year to which the amount relates. MATS reporting will commence from 1 July 2018 with a transitional period until 31 March 2019.

Superannuation investment in agriculture: The House of Representatives Standing Committee on Agriculture and Water Resources has inquired into barriers to increased investment in Australia’s agriculture sector by superannuation funds. The Committee took evidence on issues such as regulatory impediments, the availability of necessary information, and other practical barriers to investment.

‘Rules and regs’ provides a snapshot of key regulatory developments. ASFA members also have access, via the ASFA website, to the ASFA Thomson Geer Regulatory Update. Delivered in partnership with Thomson Geer, this comprehensive quarterly Update seeks to keep members informed on the changing superannuation environment across new legislation, developing policy and pertinent case law developments.
Picture of By Julia Stannard

By Julia Stannard

senior policy advisor

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Sinem Kalenderoglu

Marketing Manager - Brand & Content, Rest

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

As a Brand and Content Manager, Sinem has built her career working across brand campaigns, social media strategy and cross-channel storytelling.

Working at the intersection of technology and creative innovation, she’s crafted her skill of turning complex brand concepts into engaging social narratives that connect and resonate with member experiences.

Specialising in superannuation, she’s passionate about exploring how brand storytelling through social media can converge to drive meaningful audience connection.

Gemma Kyle

Chief Risk Officer, Rest

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Gemma was appointed as Chief Risk Officer in November 2018 and leads the Enterprise Risk function which includes investment risk, operational risk, business resilience, financial crime, compliance and regulatory engagement.

Gemma has over 25 years’ experience in risk management and governance across multiple industries including government, engineering and financial services. She is known for her ability to drive organisational change and achieve business objectives in complex and dynamic environments. Prior to joining Rest, Gemma held senior positions at MLC Life Insurance, MLC Wealth, Parsons Brinkerhoff and Federal Treasury. She is a Director on the Board of the Fund Executives Association Limited. Gemma holds a Master of Arts from the Australian National University, a Bachelor of Economics, Social Science (First Class Honours) from the University of Sydney and is a graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors.

Adrian C

Director, Partnership Program, QLD and NT, Australian Signals Directorate (ASD)

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Adrian C works in the Australian Signals Directorate and is the Director of ASD’s Cyber Security Partnership Program.

He has worked in various roles in the National Intelligence Community for the last 16 years including geospatial intelligence, intelligence support to Australian Defence Force Military Operations and writing core components of the Comprehensive Review – legal framework of the National Intelligence Community. 

Adrian transferred to Australian Signals Directorate in 2021 and was responsible for the section that develops and publishes ASD’s technical publications and guidelines.

He moved from Canberra to Brisbane in January 2023 to commence his current role within Australian Signals Directorate.

Kate Farrar

Chief Executive Officer, Brighter Super

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Kate Farrar is the Chief Executive Officer of Brighter Super, where she has led the fund’s transformation from a $10 billion Queensland public-sector fund into a $35 billion success story with more than 280,000 members.

Since her appointment as CEO in April 2018, Kate has overseen the merger of LGIAsuper and Energy Super and the acquisition of Suncorp Super—the first industry fund acquisition of a retail fund. This integration, completed 18 months ahead of schedule, delivered a 40% reduction in administration fees for members while expanding services across Queensland.

Under Kate’s leadership, Brighter Super has become one of the fastest-growing industry funds in Australia, recognised for both its operational sustainability and member-first approach. In acknowledgment of these achievements, she was awarded the Fund Executive of the Year Award by the Fund Executives Association Ltd (FEAL) in 2024.

Kate brings 35 years of leadership experience across finance and energy, including senior roles at Barclays de Zoete Wedd, Suncorp Investment Management, NSW Treasury Corporation, McKinsey & Company, and Ergon Energy.

Beyond her role at Brighter Super, Kate serves as a Non-Executive Director of ASX100-listed Seven Group Holdings and is the President of the Queensland Futures Institute.

She holds a Bachelor of Music (Honours) and a Master’s Degree in Econometrics and Finance. Through a scholarship from Chief Executive Women, she is also a graduate of INSEAD’s Advanced Management Programme. In 2025, following her FEAL award education grant, Kate completed the Stanford Graduate School of Business program, People, Culture, and Performance: Strategies from Silicon Valley.

Joseph Mitchell

Assistant Secretary, ACTU

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As ACTU Assistant Secretary, Joseph is passionate about winning a better future for working people and growing the union movement.  

Joseph has a Bachelor of Economics and Bachelor of Arts from Australian National University and a Graduate Certificate in Applied Finance from the University of NSW.  

Joseph Mitchell is a trustee director of TelstraSuper.

Vasyl Nair

Group Chief Executive Officer, Team Super

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

The Team Superannuation Fund (Team Super) is a profit-to-members, public offer pension fund dedicated to serving the retirement needs of all Australians. Team Super manages over $22 billion in funds for approximately 150,000 members.

Vasyl Nair is the Chief Executive Officer of Team Super (prior to this, Vasyl held the roles of Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Chief Risk Officer and Chief Strategy Officer).

Vasyl is a keen advocate for the ongoing development of the superannuation sector, with active participation in a number of different parts of the industry. He has served as a director of an Australian fintech organisation, specialising in superannuation and investment administration.

Vasyl was appointed to the Board of the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) as Director in January 2025, the peak pension fund association in Australia.

Vasyl has a strong background in law, corporate finance and strategy, having held senior roles across at some of Australia’s largest financial services institutions. Vasyl holds a Bachelor of Laws (Hon), Bachelor of Commerce, Graduate Diploma of Legal Practice and an Executive Master of Business Administration. He is admitted to the Supreme Court of NSW as a solicitor, is a Graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors and has achieved a Certificate of Business Excellence from the Haas School of Business, U.C.
Berkeley.

Kristian Fok

Chief Executive Officer, Cbus Super

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Kristian Fok is the CEO of Cbus Super, Australia’s leading specialist superannuation fund for the building and construction sector. Cbus was founded 40 years ago and provides superannuation and income streams to more than 925,000 members and manages over $105 billion of members’ money (as of 30 June 2025). He is responsible for all aspects of Cbus and reports directly to the Board.

Prior to his appointment in June 2023, Kristian Fok served as the Fund’s Chief Investment Officer (CIO) for 10 years. Cbus is a significant, long-term investor in the Australian economy and the Fund invests back into our members’ industries both directly and indirectly and via unique vehicles such as our wholly owned entity, Cbus Property.  

As CIO, Kristian was responsible for leading the Cbus investment strategy, this included evaluating opportunities that provide returns to members over the long term, managing investment governance and risk and monitoring the portfolio. Kristian led the development and implementation of Cbus’ hybrid internalisation strategy, which has proven successful in driving strong returns and delivering total cumulative fee and costs savings for members of over $730 million. 

Kristian is Chair of the Australian Sustainable Finance Institute (ASFI) and serves on the Board of the Australian Council of Superannuation Investors (ACSI). Kristian’s qualifications include Bachelor of Commerce, Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries Australia and Fellow of FINSIA.  

Kevin Fernandez

General Manager, Market Strategy & Propositions, Novigi

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Kevin has long played a central role in shaping and driving strategic initiatives across the superannuation and wealth management sectors. With deep expertise in data strategy and a passion for AI, Kevin leads the development of forward-thinking solutions – ranging from strategic partnerships to managed services – that address evolving client needs.  

A recognised thought leader, Kevin is known for leveraging data-driven insights to deliver sustainable value. His leadership is central to Novigi’s market positioning, helping to define the company’s growth strategy in an increasingly complex and dynamic financial landscape.  

Vicki Doyle

Chief Executive Officer, Rest

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Vicki joined Rest as Chief Executive Officer in May 2018, bringing more than 20 years of
senior executive leadership experience in superannuation, life insurance, wealth management and banking.

Vicki’s experience includes executive leadership roles at some of Australia’s largest financial services organisations. She has an extensive background in distribution, strategic marketing, digital, fund operations and contact centres, customer strategy and design and product management.

Vicki is passionate about simplifying and demystifying superannuation to help all Australians achieve their best retirement outcomes.

Vicki holds an Executive MBA from the Australian Graduate School of Management and a diploma from the Australian Institute of Company Directors. Vicki has been a Non-executive Director of the Australian Council of Superannuation Investors since 2018 and a Director of The Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia since 2022.

Louise Davidson, AM

Chief Executive Officer, Australian Council of Superannuation Investors (ACSI)

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Louise Davidson has spent her career with a focus on building long-term value for the millions of beneficiaries of Australian superannuation funds. Most recently this has included elevating the importance of environmental, social and governance factors in managing material financial risk in super fund investment portfolios. 

As CEO of the Australian Council of Superannuation Investors (ACSI) since 2015, Louise oversees ACSI’s program of company engagement, research and policy advocacy, backed by 30 years of senior experience in the financial services and ESG sectors. Her tenure as ACSI CEO has seen significant improvements in the way listed companies manage important issues including boardroom diversity, climate risk and human rights.  

Prior to being appointed ACSI CEO, she was Investment Manager, ESG at Cbus superannuation fund 

Louise is the co-founder of the Mother’s Day Classic, which has raised over $50 million for breast and ovarian cancer research since 1998. She was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in 2019 for her significant service to the superannuation sector and to breast cancer research.  

She is a director of Chief Executive Women, deputy chair of the Federated Hermes Client Advisory Board, and a former director of the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre and the International Integrated Reporting Initiative and former chair and director of the Mother’s Day Classic Foundation. 

Peter Chun

Chief Executive Officer, UniSuper

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Peter Chun joined UniSuper as the Chief Executive Officer in September 2021, bringing more than 30 years’ experience in financial services.

UniSuper is one of Australia’s largest super funds with more than 700,000 members and over $155 billion in funds under management (as at 30 June 2025).

As CEO, Peter is responsible for developing, leading, and implementing corporate strategy and culture. He is also accountable for the overall services and operational management of UniSuper Management nationally.

Prior to joining UniSuper, Peter held senior executive roles at Aware Super, Colonial First State and Credit Suisse.

Peter is a qualified Actuary with a Bachelor of Economics from Macquarie University. He holds Graduate Diplomas in Applied Finance and Investments and Financial Planning from the Securities Institute of Australia; and has undertaken the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School (Boston, USA).

Peter is a Director of Diversity Council Australia, a Member of the ASFA CEO Advisory Committee and the Australian Chamber Orchestra Finance Audit & Risk Committee.

Eoin Burke

Head of Financial Crimes, MUFG Retirement Solutions

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Eoin Burke is the Head of Financial Crimes, MUFG Retirement Solutions, a division of MUFG Pension & Market Services (MPMS), with over 20 years of experience in financial crime prevention, compliance, and data analytics. 

He has held senior leadership roles across APAC and EMEA, and plays a critical role in protecting the organisation from financial threats, responsible for safeguarding the data and monetary assets of over 20 million accounts. His remit includes fraud and scam prevention, AML/CTF compliance and reporting, regulator and law enforcement engagement, training and awareness, and driving innovation in protective technologies. He also developed ‘ALERT’, MPMS’s internal fraud analytics capability, which now protects over 10.5 million member accounts daily and has prevented more than $150 million in financial crime. 

A recognised industry leader, Eoin regularly speaks at major forums including the Financial Crimes and Cyber Security Forum and the AUSTRAC Symposium, sharing insights on emerging risks and best practices in financial crime prevention. His strategic direction continues to strengthen MPMS’s defences and reinforce its commitment to integrity and security. 

John Livanas

Chief Executive Officer, State Super

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Mr Livanas leads a team of experienced senior executives in managing the provision of member services and the investment of approximately $38 billion of assets (as at 30 June 2025).

Mr Livanas has over 30 years’ industry experience, having worked in organisations including Deloitte South Africa, the South African Government Employees Pension Fund – the precursor to the country’s sovereign fund – and several Australian superannuation funds.

Prior to his appointment in October 2011, Mr Livanas was the Chief Executive Officer of AMIST Super (2008–11) and the General Manager of FuturePlus Financial Services (2002–08). He was a Director of ISPT and ISPT Grosvenor International Property Trust from 2010–12 and in August 2013 was appointed to the Board of the Australian Council of Superannuation Investors.

Mr Livanas holds a Bachelor of Science in Engineering and an MBA from the University of Witwatersrand and a Graduate Diploma of Finance and Investments from the Financial Services Institute of Australia. He is an ASFA-accredited Investment Fiduciary and a Graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors.

Debby Blakey

Chief Executive Officer, HESTA

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Debby Blakey, GAICD, is the CEO of HESTA, Australia’s $96 billion superannuation fund for health and community services workers. With over 30 years’ experience in the superannuation and financial services sectors, she holds qualifications in Mathematics, Computer Science, Financial Advice, Governance, Pension Fund Design and Sustainability.

Debby’s leadership is characterised by a ‘people-first’ approach, focusing on enhancing member experiences and financial outcomes while also ensuring operational rigour and excellence. She is a strong advocate for innovation and transformation within the superannuation industry.

Debby is the President of the Australian Council of Superannuation Investors (ACSI), a Director of the International Corporate Governance Network (ICGN) and is the founding Chair of the 40:40 Vision initiative – promoting gender equality at executive and Board level in ASX300 companies.

Under Debby’s leadership, HESTA has been called the ‘corporate conscience of Australia’ for its commitment to strong governance, environmental management and gender equality.

Cath Bowtell

Chair, IFM Investors

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Cath is the Chair of IFM Investors; Industry Super Holdings (ISH); and the Federal Government’s Jobs & Skills Ministerial Advisory Board.   

She is a Director of Industry Fund Services (IFS) and of the Melbourne Arts Precinct Corporation. 

Cath has worked for many years in senior roles in both the superannuation industry and union movement. She was the Chief Executive of IFS and Chief Executive of the Australian Government Employees Superannuation Trust (AGEST) from 2010 until its merger with AustralianSuper in 2013.

Prior to this, Cath was a Senior Industrial Officer at the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU). She has held a number of directorships and committee positions throughout her career, including Director of AustralianSuper, Director of AGEST Super and Director of Ausgrid.

Natalie Previtera

Chief Executive Officer, NGS Super

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Natalie is the Chief Executive Officer of NGS Super.  

With a career grounded in governance, legal, and strategic leadership, Natalie brings a forward-thinking and purpose driven approach to superannuation. She is responsible for steering the fund through a dynamic regulatory landscape, ensuring operational excellence, and delivering long-term value to members.

Natalie also served as Chief Risk and Governance officer having deep institutional knowledge and a strong track record in executive oversight and regulatory engagement.

She is known for her collaborative leadership style and her ability to drive transformation while maintaining a strong member-first ethos.

Prior to joining NGS in 2019 Natalie held senior governance roles at AMP, Suncorp and Perpetual.  

Laura Catterick

Director, Resilience & Cyber, UK Finance

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Laura Catterick is the Director of Resilience & Cyber at UK Finance, which is the collective voice for the UK banking and finance industry, representing over 300 firms and supporting members in their efforts to build more resilient firms and a more resilient financial sector.

Within UK Finance, Laura works closely with industry leaders, government, and regulators, influencing policy on operational resilience and cybersecurity at a national level. UK Finance also co-chairs CMORG (Cross Market Operational Resilience Group) to deliver collaborative resilience initiatives that address systemic risks.

Laura is a Chartered Professional Accountant from Canada with extensive experience in risk, regulatory compliance, cyber security, operational resilience, and large-scale transformation. She has held senior executive roles within highly regulated sectors, including roles across all three lines of defence within Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Lloyds Banking Group, and Mastercard.

Josh Cross

Chief Operating Officer, SS&C Technologies

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Josh Cross brings over 30 years of experience in Technology, Operations, Delivery and Transformation within the Australian Financial Services industry. His expertise spans Trade Finance, Institutional and Corporate Lending, Consumer Lending, Share Trading, Insurance and Superannuation.

Josh joined SS&C in July 2025 through a lift-out from Insignia Financial – one of Australia’s largest Superannuation and Investment providers, known for its growth through large-scale acquisitions and technology separations from major Australian banks.

In his current role, Josh leads the SS&C  Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) function, which delivers technology, operations, and service delivery for more than one million Australian across multiple technology eco-systems, supported by a team of approximately 1300 staff. Over the next three years, Josh will also lead the major transformation of the underlying superannuation platforms and processes, migrating to SS&C’s Bluedoor ecosystem.

Lt Gen Michelle McGuinness, CSC

National Cyber Security Coordinator, National Office of Cyber Security

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Lieutenant General Michelle McGuinness, CSC was appointed as Australia’s National Cyber Security Coordinator (the Coordinator) on 26 February 2024.

As the Coordinator, LTGEN McGuinness leads national cyber security policy, the coordination of responses to major cyber incidents, whole of government cyber incident preparedness efforts, and the strengthening of Commonwealth cyber security capability. 

LTGEN McGuinness has served in the Australian Defence Force for 30 years in a range of tactical, operational, and strategic roles in Australia and internationally.

Prior to this appointment, LTGEN McGuinness most recently served as Deputy Director Commonwealth Integration in the United States Defense Intelligence Agency. In this role, she led policy and cultural reform, and technological integration, including interoperability across information technology, systems and data.

Jamie Bonic

Global Head of FX and Commodity Sales, NAB

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Jamie Bonic is NAB’s Global Head of FX and Commodity Sales, responsible for several FX-related sales businesses including NAB’s Institutional, Corporate, and Government teams.  Prior to joining NAB, Jamie spent 17 years in London working for JPMorgan as a Managing Director in their Global Markets division, leading sales and trading across Interest Rate and FX products. Jamie holds a Bachelor of Economics from The University of Sydney and is currently based in Sydney.

Katie Miller

Deputy CEO, Regulation, AUSTRAC

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Katie Miller is the Deputy CEO, Regulation, AUSTRAC and has strategic responsibility for AUSTRAC’s regulatory, policy and legal functions. 
Katie has extensive experience exercising regulatory functions and advising regulators at state and federal levels. Katie is a published author on issues involving regulation, law and technology and supports connections between government, practitioners, communities of practice and academia. 

Derek Thompson

Via live link

Best Selling Author, Podcast Host of 'Plain English'

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Few speakers can match Derek Thompson‘s ability to synthesize mega-trends in society, labor, economics, technology, and politics. Put another way: Derek trawls the data sets and does the forecasting and deep reporting necessary to help us better understand how we live, how we vote, how we spend, and how we work.

In his paradigm-shifting #1 New York Times bestseller, Abundance (co-written with Ezra Klein), this award-winning journalist reveals how our policies and culture have pushed us into a world of scarcity (not enough housing, workers, or progress)—and offers a radical new path towards a world where housing is affordable, energy is plentiful, and innovation flourishes across industries.

He shares a compelling vision of a future where we have more than enough for everybody, and a practical, actionable roadmap for how to get there. It starts with taking more risks, building more expansively, and recognizing that we all have the power to create a world of abundance. “Everything’s utopian until it’s reality,” he says.

Carmen Beverley-Smith

Executive Director - Superannuation, Life & Private Health Insurance, APRA

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Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Carmen joined APRA in March 2023 and holds the role of Executive Director, Life and Private Health Insurance and Superannuation.  

She has had an esteemed career in financial services, spanning over 25 years. She has held diverse leadership roles at Westpac and Commonwealth Bank of Australia, including across risk, transformation and change, product and portfolio development, and sales and service. 

Prior to joining APRA, she held the role of General Manager, Risk Transformation Delivery Integration at Westpac. This involved leading the group-wide implementation of a suite of solutions to uplift risk management capability and develop data, analytics and reporting. 

Carmen leads with a values-driven approach and a particular interest in developing and mentoring talent. 

She holds a Bachelor of Commerce and Accounting, is a certified Chartered Accountant and a Graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors. 

Amy C. Edmondson

Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management, Harvard Business School

Sessions

Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Amy C. Edmondson is the Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at the Harvard Business School, a chair established to support the study of human interactions that lead to the creation of successful enterprises that contribute to the betterment of society.

Edmondson has been recognized by the biannual Thinkers50 global ranking of management thinkers since 2011, and most recently was ranked #1 in 2021 and 2023; she also received that organization’s Breakthrough Idea Award in 2019, and Talent Award in 2017.  She studies teaming, psychological safety, and organisational learning, and her articles have been published in numerous academic and management outlets, including Administrative Science Quarterly, Academy of Management Journal, Harvard Business Review and California Management Review. Her 2019 book, The Fearless Organization: Creating Psychological Safety in the Workplace for Learning, Innovation and Growth (Wiley), has been translated into 15 languages. Her prior books – Teaming: How organizations learn, innovate and compete in the knowledge economy (Jossey-Bass, 2012), Teaming to Innovate (Jossey-Bass, 2013) and Extreme Teaming (Emerald, 2017) – explore teamwork in dynamic organisational environments. In Building the future: Big teaming for audacious innovation (Berrett-Koehler, 2016), she examines the challenges and opportunities of teaming across industries to build smart cities. 

Edmondson’s latest book, Right Kind of Wrong (Atria), builds on her prior work on psychological safety and teaming to provide a framework for thinking about, discussing, and practicing the science of failing well. First published in the US and the UK in September, 2023, the book is due to be translated into 24 additional languages, and was selected for the Financial Times and Schroders Best Business Book of the Year award.

Before her academic career, she was Director of Research at Pecos River Learning Centers, where she worked on transformational change in large companies. In the early 1980s, she worked as Chief Engineer for architect/inventor Buckminster Fuller, and her book A Fuller Explanation: The Synergetic Geometry of R. Buckminster Fuller (Birkauser Boston, 1987) clarifies Fuller’s mathematical contributions for a non-technical audience. Edmondson received her PhD in organisational behavior, AM in psychology, and AB in engineering and design from Harvard University.

 

Daniel Mulino MP

Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services

Sessions

Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Born in Brindisi, Italy, Daniel was a young child when he moved with his family to Australia. He grew up in Canberra and completed his first degrees – arts and law – at the ANU. He then completed a Master of Economics (University of Sydney) and a PhD in economics from Yale.

He lectured at Monash University, was an economic adviser in the Gillard government and was a Victorian MP from 2014 to 2018. As Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer of Victoria, Daniel helped deliver major infrastructure projects and developed innovative financing structures for community projects.

In 2018 he was preselected for the new federal seat of Fraser and became its first MP at the 2019 election, re-elected in 2022 and 2025. From 2022 to 2025, Daniel was chair of the House of Representatives’ Standing Economics Committee in which he chaired inquiries; economic dynamism, competition and business formation and insurers’ responses to 2022 major floods claims.

In 2025, he became the Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services.

In August 2022, Daniel published ‘Safety Net: The Future of Welfare in Australia’, which aims to explore the ways in which an insurance approach can improve the effectiveness of government service delivery.