The Employees Provident Fund (EPF) has removed
restrictions that had prevented members from making investments
overseas. EPF now
allows its members to invest in unit trust funds fully invested
overseas, a change from its previous restriction to unit trust funds
with no more than 30% foreign exposure.
Members can now opt to invest in unit trust funds that are 100% invested overseas as long as EPF recognises these funds. Members can invest using their savings in Account 1.
The EPF currently manages about RM680 billion of investment assets
for 14.5 million members, of whom 6.7 million are active members. It declared a dividend rate of 6.4 per cent for 2015 and 6.75 per cent for 2014.
Come January next year, the EPF will offer a fully syariah-compliant investment scheme, called Simpanan Syariah.The EPF expects between 1.5 million and two million of its members to
convert their savings to Simpanan Syariah during the first year of its
launch.
In May, EPF chief executive officer Shahril Ridza Ridzuan was quoted
as saying the fund has generally paid out higher dividends to its
contributors compared with unit trusts. Only one out of five contributors who have withdrawn their money
from the Employees Provident Fund to invest in unit trusts have enjoyed
better returns than what the retirement fund would have given them.
“Contributors who opt to invest outside of EPF should have financial literacy,” Shahril was reported to have said. He had also speculated that the dividend for 2016 is likely to be lower than this year’s 6.4 per cent.
“Equity returns this year will not be at the same level as last year.
So, if you look at the contribution of equities, which provided 60 per
cent of our income last year, it is now already down to 40 per cent.
“If this continues, our total gross income for 2016 will be less than
2015 and the dividend declared will be lower as well,” Shahril said.
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