
Generate's Impact Investment Wins Top Design Award
The Willard Street development won tautahi Community Housing Trust a Gold Award (Residential) at the 2025 New Zealand Commercial Project Awards, presented by Master Builders. The awards celebrate projects that demonstrate innovation, quality and …
Back in 2022, Generate partnered with Community Finance to make a $14 million impact investment to finance 35 new homes for people in need, in partnership with Ōtautahi Community Housing Trust. It's now proud to report that the Willard Street project, completed in 2023, has now been recognised with an award for its high-quality homes that lead the way in design, performance and community impact.
The Willard Street development won Ōtautahi Community Housing Trust a Gold Award (Residential) at the 2025 New Zealand Commercial Project Awards, presented by Master Builders. The awards celebrate projects that demonstrate innovation, quality and collaboration across New Zealand's building sector.
Willard Street includes 35 warm, comfortable homes designed for modern public housing. The new Homestar 7-rated homes replace 26 ageing bedsits built in the 1940s.
This investment was one of Generate's impact investments, which aim to make a positive difference to the lives of New Zealanders, whilst providing fair market returns for our Generate KiwiSaver Scheme members.
Generate Portfolio Manager, Ayrton Oliver, says this recognition further reinforces the value of the project.
'Working together with Community Finance and Ōtautahi Community Housing Trust shows the potential influence that investing can have on social outcomes for New Zealand, as well as the financial returns for Generate KiwiSaver Scheme members over the long-term,' he says.
'Responsible investing is one of our core values at Generate, so we often seek out investment opportunities that have the potential to drive both positive financial returns and positive social impact – we don't believe these need to be mutually exclusive.'
In 2020 Generate was the first KiwiSaver scheme to invest in social housing via a $21 million investment managed by Community Finance into Salvation Army Community Bonds. That investment supported 118 warm, dry, affordable community houses across three locations.
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1News
an hour ago
- 1News
Do more expensive KiwiSaver funds give a better return?
Does paying more for your KiwiSaver give you a better return? Well, maybe. But maybe not. RNZ has conducted analysis of Morningstar's most recent KiwiSaver data, comparing long-term returns to the funds' total cost ratios. It showed that the highest performers in the conservative category, were Milford, QuayStreet and Fisher TWO. Fisher TWO was charging less than average - at 0.52% compared to 0.62%. Milford and QuayStreet had high fees relative to the category but were low overall and their returns were higher than some of the more aggressive fund types that would usually be more expensive. ADVERTISEMENT Milford had returns of 5.1% a year over 10 years, compared to a peer group average of 4.1%. Simplicity had the lowest fees for that category but does not have 10 years of returns. Over five years, it returned 1.9% a year. Of moderate funds, Generate and BNZ were solid performers. BNZ had fees of 0.45% compared to an average of 0.8% for that type of fund and was the second best for returns over 10 years. Generate was first but had higher fees, at 1.14%. Westpac had the lowest fees and was fourth-best performing. Among balanced funds, Quay St and Milford were delivering strong returns but had some of the higher fees - at 1.03% and 1.07% respectively, compared to an average 0.75%. SuperLife Ethica was the third-best performer and had fees of 0.7%. Simplicity had the cheapest funds of that group, at 0.25%. It does not have 10 years of history but was 11th over five years. ADVERTISEMENT Milford, Generate and Quay St were the outperformers in the growth category. Milford returned 10.4% a year over 10 years compared to an average 7.8% for that group of funds. But investors were paying higher fees - between 1.25% and 1.29% compared to an average 0.97%. Generate, FisherTWO and Booster were best performing in the aggressive categories. On the flipside, ANZ was the poorest performer in the conservative category but was charging above-average fees. Booster was ranked eighth and was charging 1.11% compared to the average 0.62%. (Source: 1News) Among moderate funds, Booster and Fisher Funds appeared to be providing lower returns for higher fees. In the balanced category, ANZ was charging 0.91% compared to an average 0.75% and was ranked 15th. Booster was 11th with fees of 1.22%. ADVERTISEMENT Booster also seemed expensive compared to its returns in the growth category. Morningstar data director Greg Bunkall said there did not seem to be a strong correlation between paying more for a fund and getting a better return. "There are some good active - which cost more - and good passive options -which cost less. "Depending on what time period, or cohort you choose you can get widely differing results. My suggestion is as an investor, get an idea about the style you like and then assess those providers who offer that service at that price point and make sure you are in the right risk profile." Stefan Stevanovic, head of international equities at QuayStreet Asset Management, said there was not just one one contributing factor that had helped it perform on a returns to fees basis. "There are numerous drivers at play which have contributed to QuayStreet's strong performance. If we had to summarise it briefly it would be centred around our heavy emphasis of understanding current risks. KiwiSaver (file). (Source: 1News) ADVERTISEMENT "This helps with filtering out a lot of the noise and narrows our focus in areas that tend to matter. When you pair that approach with a robust and fundamentals driven portfolio construction process, you tend to see improvement in risk-adjusted performance." Fisher Funds chief investment officer Ashley Gardyne said its funds had delivered solid returns in the past 12 months. "That said, relative to benchmark, our returns aren't where we'd like them to be. "As an active manager there will inevitably be periods when returns lag as well as beat the benchmark. History tells us that performance is cyclical, and occasional periods of underperformance are part and parcel of delivering strong long-term results. "Our team are always looking for ways to lift returns and we think we are well placed to deliver strong outcomes in the years ahead." Booster chief executive Di Papadopoulos said the data did not capture the value of all services being offered. "They show that Booster's performance is returning firm results, but don't reflect value delivered with a host of other - and in some cases unique - offerings to our KiwiSaver members. ADVERTISEMENT "The Morningstar report also does not account for the level of risk being taken in each fund, which is a measure central to our investment approach; we target lower levels of month-to-month volatility than peer funds, to improve how well funds can withstand market volatility. "A key driver of Booster's investment strategy is to smooth out market highs and lows for KiwiSaver members, such as during global turmoil following the pandemic, and US tariff uncertainty affecting the global economy. "Monitoring of the seven-year period up to June 2025 for risk-adjusted returns, has Booster's Socially Responsible (SR) Balanced and Balanced funds ranked third and fourth respectively, out of 16 funds." She said Booster's fees included access to financial advice, free accidental death cover, and access to its budgeting app. The highest-performing fund over the 12 months to June was Koura's Bitcoin fund, which returned 73%. The morning's headlines in 90 seconds, including our first ever espionage trial, the end of an era for Cook Strait crossings, and a surprising survival story. (Source: 1News) Koura founder Rupert Carlyon said it had an annualised 76% per year return over three years. It has a total cost ratio of 1.1%. ADVERTISEMENT "This outperformance has been driven by the normalisation of Bitcoin over this period. "We saw the launch of the ETFs in the US which enabled institutional investors to jump into the asset class. The US now has a very pro crypto administration which is likely to drive the continued growth of Bitcoin and other crypto assets. "When we launched this fund three years ago we had a large number of commentators saying it was inappropriate for KiwiSaver investors to be investing in a high risk and speculative asset such us Bitcoin. Our perspective has always been that investors should be able to pick and choose where they invest their hard earned funds. 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Otago Daily Times
9 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
'Focused 100%' on economy, not passport: Luxon
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon denies the government has lost its focus, as calls intensify for the government to take action to help pull Auckland out of its economic slump. Earlier this month Auckland Business Chamber boss Simon Bridges called on the government to do more to stimulate the economy in the supercity. The latest Stats NZ data showed Auckland's 6.1% unemployment rate for the June 2025 quarter was the worst of all regions, ahead of the national rate of 5.2%. An article in the the Sunday Star-Times at the weekend said "many business leaders and political insiders, including those from traditional centre-right bases of support for National, are beginning to doubt whether" Luxon's coalition has an economic plan. Heart of the City boss Viv Beck said "Rome is burning for some of our small businesses", and Newmarket Business Association head Mark Knoff-Thomas said it was "ludicrous" the government was spending its time reordering words on passport covers instead of focusing on the economy. Mayor Wayne Brown wants a bed night levy, which the government is not keen on. "They'll cave in. They want to be elected…. They'll cave in on this, mate. This is a third of New Zealand. This is the city that decides who's the government." Luxon said the government was "not focused on passport changes" but would not be implementing a bed tax. "We're actually focused 100% on actually growing this economy … We inherited the big recession. We've had a massive post-Covid hangover," he said. We've had a lot of international challenges with respect to tariffs, and what that's done for sentiment and confidence, but I just say to you, we're also seeing a recovery in New Zealand." Luxon said South Island primary industries were "growing strongly" but "we know we've got work to do in our cities". He pointed to the government's fast-track scheme for big projects, capital investment write-offs for small businesses and making it easier to get things built. "It's really tough in Auckland and also in Wellington, you know? If you're in Christchurch, it's different, as I said before, but, you know, there's no doubt about it," Luxon said "We're open to continuing to look at what more we can do. We're pretty dynamic and agile. We keep adjusting and doing things to adjust to the circumstances that we're in." One recent poll saw Labour surge ahead of National, and Luxon neck-and-neck with Labour's Chris Hipkins as preferred prime minister. Another had National and Labour in a statistical, ditto for Luxon and Hipkins, with just 1 percentage point separating the parties and leaders. When Bridges led the National Party, it regularly polled in the 40s. He was rolled as leader in 2020 after a collapse in the party's support as Covid-19 spread the world. Luxon said he would "absolutely" be leading National into the 2026 election. "For me it's actually staying focused on what New Zealanders care about and that is actually us fixing this economy. "I appreciate it's been difficult, you know, we've had a very difficult, you know, a poor inheritance, but, you know, our job is to fix it for New Zealanders and that's what we're going to do every day."


NZ Herald
14 hours ago
- NZ Herald
NZ debt nears $1 trillion as growth moderates, savings fall
At the current rate of growth, we'll hit that landmark inside the next three years. The rate of growth has moderated in the past two years as the Government has sought to curb borrowing, and the housing market, which accounts for the largest chunk of our debt, has been flat. Businesses have also been hunkering down, afraid to invest and expand, and farmers are getting good returns but using them to address high debt levels. But while the rate at which we're borrowing has eased, so too has the rate at which we are saving and growing wealth. The easiest path out of debt is wealth creation, shrinking our net debt and our debt-to-GDP ratio. So going backwards on that front is a cause for concern. The big, ugly numbers In the year to May 31, we hit a total of $872.6 billion in gross debt. That figure is up from $827.3b last year, a rise of 5.4%. It represents an average of $163,717 in raw debt for every Kiwi in the country. The rate of growth is relatively subdued by the standards of previous years. In the first New Zealand Herald Nation of Debt feature, in 2016, the total gross debt figure was $492.5b. We have seen total debt rise 77% since then. That represents an average annual increase of 6.65%. Given we are still coming down from a period of high interest rates, it was not surprising that borrowing growth was subdued, said Reserve Bank adviser for financial stability assessment and strategy, Charles Lilly. 'We're still in a relatively contractionary phase,' he said. 'We want to see stability. We don't want credit debt off the scale and people taking too much risk.' On the downside, a lack of borrowing growth was more of an issue with the financial system if the banks were not willing to lend, he said. 'I think banks are still willing to lend; it's mainly from the demand side, they just don't have customers coming through the door.' Crown debt also continues to rise, despite the Government's efforts to curb spending. Core Crown borrowing (the baseline we've used since 2016) was $238.8b in the year to May 31, 2025. That's up from $215b in the year to May 30, 2024 – an increase of 11%. It follows an increase of 11% for the previous year. While the coalition Government hasn't been able to stop Crown debt rising in double digits, it has at least reduced the annual rate of increase. It was 27% and 17% respectively in the years to May 2022 and May 2023. Crown debt is always a hot political topic. Wellington business editor Jenée Tibshraeny will take a deep dive into the state of the Government books tomorrow in part two of this series. The other side of the ledger Of course, the nominal figures still look scary. So does your mortgage if you don't weigh it against the value of your house. It is important to compare the gross debt figure to our saving rates and assets to add more context. Unfortunately, the latest Stats NZ figures (for the year to March) showed New Zealanders' household net wealth has fallen. Household net worth, the value of all assets owned by households less the value of their liabilities, fell $25.4b to $2.42 trillion in the March 2025 quarter. That is still almost three times the total gross debt figure. But in the year ended March 2025, household net worth fell $23.1b (0.9%), after a rise of $61.2b (2.5%) in the year ended March 2024. We're currently headed in the wrong direction. Most of that fall will be related to house prices, although some of it can be attributed to lower savings rates. Stats NZ's household saving data shows how much households are saving out of their current income (ie current income less current consumption). The data shows savings fell $392 million to minus $1.6b in the March 2025 quarter. Sector by sector Housing It should come as no surprise that the nation's mortgage debt accounts for the bulk of what we owe. Housing debt shot up during the big housing booms in the middle of the last decade and again during the first blush of Covid as stimulus money and low interest rates bolstered property prices. In the year to May 2016, the annual rate of increase for total housing debt was 9.2%, in 2021 it was 11.5%. If we look back further, it topped 16% in 2004. So this year's increase of 4.7% looks modest in comparison. It represents a slight increase on the even more modest 3.3% rise in the year to May 2024. That lift in mortgage debt may reflect the slight uptick in prices late last year and early this year (albeit something of a false start for those waiting on a full-blown housing market recovery). But the level of borrowing has also been lifted by record numbers of first-home buyers coming into the market, and fewer investors, said the RBNZ's Lilly. The former typically need to borrow more from the bank than the latter. If the housing market picks up later this year, as many pundits expect, then we'll likely see the rate of increase in mortgage borrowing follow, he says. Mortgage debt, most of which we owe to Australian banks, is a feature of the New Zealand economy that tends to worry international credit agencies more than our Crown debt. It has been a concern for the Reserve Bank in the past. 'In the current environment, subdued is definitely the theme,' Lilly said. Business Business borrowing barely lifted in the past year – and that is not good news for the economy. At $136.5b in the year to May 31, it was up just 0.6%. Businesses typically borrow to invest in new equipment that will improve productivity or to expand, taking on staff, to grab more market share. None of that stuff has been a feature of the past year. In fact, the opposite has been the case. Many businesses are struggling to survive. Those that desperately need cash to stay in business aren't going to get it from a bank. The struggle for many retail businesses is also highlighted in the relatively anaemic growth in personal consumer lending. At $14.5b, it is up 1.1% in the year to May 31. NZ Herald retail reporter Tom Raynel will take a closer look at the consumer borrowing trends later this week as part of the Nation of Debt series. For larger businesses, issues such as global uncertainty and tariffs would be limiting the appetite to borrow and take risks, Lilly said. It was also the case that the commercial property sector remained very weak, he said. Agriculture Unlike the struggling urban business sector, farmers have been benefiting from strong international export prices in the past year. Numerous commentators have suggested increased spending in the agricultural sector should buoy the regional economies and eventually flow through to the cities. The borrowing data for the past year offers some clues as to why that may take longer than many expect. Total agricultural debt is down 1% for the year to May 31, to $62.8b. Farmers appeared to be using their increased earnings to pay down debt in the first instance, Lilly said. This wasn't a bad thing; it is only a few years ago that the Reserve Bank was highlighting dairy debt as a significant risk to New Zealand's financial stability, he said. By the numbers That big, ugly number in our graphic is New Zealand's total gross debt. It combines the latest Reserve Bank figures for private debt with Treasury numbers for Crown debt and Local Government Funding Agency data on council debt, and IRD's data on student loans. The Reserve Bank figures include housing debt, consumer debt, business debt and agricultural debt to June 30. These are updated monthly by the central bank as part of its brief to monitor and maintain financial stability. The Crown debt figure is taken from the Treasury's Interim Financial Statements (11 months to May 31) and is the figure for core Crown borrowings. This is different from the net core Crown debt figure often used by politicians when discussing debt-to-GDP ratios. We use this (on Treasury's advice) as it is a gross debt figure but excludes debt held by state-owned enterprises, which would have been covered in the Reserve Bank statistics. The debt figure supplied by the Local Government Funding Agency is gross debt for the year to June 30, 2024. It captures all core council activities (Watercare, Auckland Transport, etc) but excludes some commercial activities (eg Christchurch City Council's Orion lines company, Port of Lyttelton, Christchurch Airport) as these would also be included in RBNZ data. Student loan debt is from the IRD statistics to March 2025. COMING UP IN THIS SERIES Tomorrow: Gov't debt: Are higher taxes inevitable? Wednesday: Consumer debt: What are Kiwis borrowing for? Thursday: Student debt: How big? How bad? Liam Dann is Business Editor at Large for the New Zealand Herald. He is a senior writer and columnist, as well as presenting and producing videos and podcasts. He joined the Herald in 2003.