


STOCKSPOT’S SUPER SCAM? ETF-Only Fund Exposes Australians to Unnecessary Market Risk

ETF-Only Super: A Risky Gamble Disguised as Innovation?
Wealth management and robo-advisory platform Stockspot has officially launched its first retail superannuation product, positioning itself as a simple, transparent, and low-fee alternative to traditional super funds.
The fund, made up entirely of ETFs, promises members “greater visibility and control over their retirement savings.” But in reality, it could be exposing them to even greater financial risk.
ETFs: The Market-Driven Trap That Super Investors Can’t Escape
Stockspot’s new fund may sound like an upgrade, but ETFs remain completely tied to stock market fluctuations.
This means investors could see their retirement savings wiped out during market downturns—just like we’ve seen happen time and time again.
Low fees mean nothing if your portfolio is at the mercy of market volatility, leaving Australians with little control over their financial future.
Why Australians Are Dumping Market-Linked Investments for Real Assets
Unlike stocks, property-backed investments like Supavest’s One Contract Property (OCP) and Tenants in Common (TIC) solutions provide real, tangible assets that hold value beyond market speculation.
These solutions offer stable rental income, capital appreciation, and full ownership, making them a far superior long-term strategy compared to ETFs, which offer nothing but exposure to unpredictable stock movements.
Super vs. Property: The Smart Investor’s Choice is Clear
The Stockspot Super Fund may be a step towards lower fees, but it does nothing to address the core issue—Australians being locked into a super system that forces them into risky, market-dependent investments.
Supavest’s OCP and TIC Property solutions offer real wealth-building potential, passive income, and security, something ETFs will never provide.
The Verdict: Don’t Let Market Uncertainty Dictate Your Future
For investors who want real control, real ownership, and real returns, relying on ETFs—whether inside or outside of super—simply isn’t enough.
Stockspot’s latest offering is just another way to keep Australians tethered to a volatile system.