Urgent warning to Australians to check their super balance now after fund collapses: The postcodes hit hardest


Aussies who lost their retirement savings overnight have renewed an urgent warning for others to check their super, after the worst hit suburbs from a twin fund collapse were revealed.

Victims from the failed First Guardian and Shield superannuation fund collapses copped a fresh blow last week when it was revealed that the government compensation scheme is mired in a $170million funding blackhole.

First Guardian and Shield Master went under in May 2024 owing about $1.2billion, with more than 12,000 investors believed to have been affected.

Yet only 3,343 people have lodged complaints with the Australian Financial Complaints Authority in the hope of recovering some of the money they are owed. 

First Guardian victim and advocate Melinda Kee said there are people going about their daily lives, not knowing their retirement savings have been lost.

‘The true scale of the crisis is likely far worse, with many people still unaware their retirement savings are either frozen or gone.

‘Check your super. Tell your parents. Tell your friends. And if government agencies know where these investors are, they must stop waiting for them to stumble forward alone.’ 

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission recently revealed the top 10 postcodes hardest hit by the collapse.

SOS Save Our Super advocate Melinda Kee has renewed warnings for Australians to check their superannuation accounts

SOS Save Our Super advocate Melinda Kee has renewed warnings for Australians to check their superannuation accounts

The Melbourne suburbs of Cranbourne, Cranbourne East and Cranbourne North (3977), Werribee and Hoppers Crossing (3030), Truganina (3029) and Craigieburn (3064) have the highest number of victims.

Four Queensland postcodes were also listed – Mackay, Toowoomba, Bundaberg and Coomera/Pimpama.

Perth suburbs Armadale and Baldivis rounded out the top 10.

Ms Kee is now demanding local MPs in impacted electorates speak up and publicly warn potential victims.

Melbourne woman Susy Zjak, 54, has become ‘obsessed’ with urging everyone she knows to check their super after she lost almost $574,000.

After losing her Qantas job during the Covid pandemic, she switched her super to First Guardian after following advice from a financial advisor in 2022.

Her nest egg grew from $395,000 to $574,000 in just two years until First Guardian Master Fund’s sudden collapse in 2024.

The collapse left Ms Zjak with just several thousand in retirement savings.

Susy Zjak is 'obsessed' with telling everyone she knows to check their super after she lost almost $574,000

Susy Zjak is ‘obsessed’ with telling everyone she knows to check their super after she lost almost $574,000

The cancer survivor has been unable to work and recoup her losses due to injury.

‘I don’t know what can be recovered, but I hope I get something back,’ Ms Zjak told Nine.

‘I wouldn’t wish anyone to go through what I went through.’

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) is conducting multiple investigations into the First Guardian fund.

ASIC alleges First Guardian director David Anderson, 46, siphoned millions of dollars from the fund into his personal ANZ bank account.

The regulator also alleges Anderson transferred $274million offshore after learning he was under investigation.

Before the fund collapsed, he purchased a $9million mansion in Melbourne’s Hawthorn.

Fellow director Simon Selimaj, 63, had a $548,000 Lamborghini Urus registered in his name, which ASIC alleges was bought using money from the fund.

None of the money allegedly transferred offshore has been recovered.



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