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Issued January 2026
 
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In this newsletter...
  Benchtest 12.2025 – RFS MD new year message, FIMA new start, my FIMA journey and more...  
 
Jump to...
     
IMPORTANT NOTES AND REMINDERS
 
  NAMFISA levies
  • Funds with January 2025 year-ends must submit their 2nd levy returns and payments by 25 February 2026;
  • Funds with July 2025 year-ends must submit their 1st levy returns and payments by 25 February 2026; and
  • Funds with January 2025 year-ends must submit their final levy returns and payments by 30 January 2025.
Housing loan interest rate unchanged in January

The interest rate on direct housing loans remained unchanged at 9% in January. The minimum repayment amounts will also remain unchanged from 1 February 2026.

 
  Registered service providers

Certain pension fund service providers must register with NAMFISA and submit regular reports to the authority. Download a list of service providers registered as of August 2025, here...

Retirement calculator

Use our web-based retirement and risk shortfall calculator for your retirement planning. Find it here...

If you need help with your financial planning, get in touch with 
  • Annemarie Nel CFP® (061-446 073)
  • Christina Linge (061-446 075)
  • Dennis Fabianus (061-446 098)
Toolbox for trustees

RFS provides comprehensive support for trustees. Find a list of download documents to assist with the governance and management of private funds, registered as of June 2024, here...

 
 
  
IN THIS NEWSLETTER...
 
 
In this newsletter, we address the following topics:
 
 
 
Read the new year message to RFS stakeholders in ‘A note from the managing director’.

In 'Tilman Friedrich's industry forum' we present... 
  • Monthly review of portfolio performance – 31 December 2025
  • From hegemony to multipolar risk? What could its implications be?
  • Afterthoughts on my FIMA journey
  • Where is the National Pension Fund heading?
  • The FIM Act - a new start: Gen.S.10.11, and Gen.S.10.12
  • Leadership as service: A lesson for regulators
In Compliments, read...
  • Compliment from a former member
In Benchmark: A Note from Günter Pfeifer, read about... 
  • Important circulars issued by the fund
In 'News from RFS', read about...
  • RFS re-appointed as fund administrator
  • RFS welcomes new staff
  • Staff improving their competencies
  • Other staff news
  • Important circulars issued by RFS
  In 'Legal snippets', read about...
  • Pension funds and the Access to Information Act
  • Update on the Electronic Transactions Act
  • Trusts in Namibia after the Trust Administration Act, 2023 – What practitioners should note
In 'Snippets for the pension funds industry,' read about...
  • What is your performance benchmark?
  • Five surprises every retiree faces in their first year
In ‘Snippets of general interest', read about...
  • Helping your spouse preparing for life without you
  • Things you should never include in your will
And make a point of reading what our clients say about us in the ‘Compliments’ section. It should give you a good appreciation of who and what we are!

As always, your comment is welcome, so open a new mail and drop us a note!

Regards
Tilman Friedrich
 
 
     
 
A NOTE FROM THE MANAGING DIRECTOR
  
New year message to RFS stakeholders
  
  As we welcome you back from the festive season, I would like to take this opportunity to wish all our stakeholders a prosperous and fulfilling year ahead. The year before us promises to be both exciting and challenging for the pension funds industry, and it is important that we begin it with clarity, preparedness, and resolve.

Towards the end of last year, NAMFISA informed the non-banking financial services industry that the Honourable Minister of Finance had announced the intention to implement the Financial Intermediaries and Markets Act (FIMA). Although FIMA was passed into law in 2021, its implementation was deferred, largely due to public concerns around Regulation 5.10, which proposed compulsory preservation of pension savings until retirement. Following widespread public consultation conducted by a Ministerial task committee, the outcome was clear that there is overwhelming opposition to any form of compulsory preservation.

Towards the end of last year, the Cabinet granted the Minister of Finance a mandate to proceed with the implementation of FIMA, subject to NAMFISA addressing the material concerns raised by the pension funds industry. While FIMA implementation will mark an important step toward regulatory certainty, it also introduces enhanced governance, compliance, and operational demands that will reshape how we all operate.

At the same time, the industry must prepare for another potentially transformative development. The Social Security Commission appears to be advancing plans to introduce a National Pension Fund (NPF). The SSC has already issued a public request for proposals to engage actuarial, investment, and administration experts to assist with the implementation of the NPF, based on a design developed with the support of ILO consultants. This design envisages mandatory participation and contribution by all employers and employees in the formal sector.

Taken together, the implementation of FIMA on the one hand and the proposed NPF on the other will fundamentally alter the retirement savings landscape. These changes will undoubtedly present challenges, and it would be unrealistic to assume that the industry will emerge unchanged. However, periods of disruption also create opportunities for those who are prepared, adaptable, and committed to long-term value creation and sustainability.

Internally, we have taken deliberate steps to ready ourselves for this new environment. We have built capacity to meet FIMA requirements, strengthened our governance structures, and invested in additional internal resources and our new, future-fit Everest administration platform. We have also developed mitigation strategies to manage the potential impact of the NPF, while acknowledging that these reforms will continue to evolve. In line with our new government’s motto, it will not be business as usual for us either.

We are actively considering strategic options to ensure that we remain the preferred partner for pension fund management in Namibia, with a continued emphasis on premium, locally rooted service. As always, we will balance growth ambitions with long-term sustainability, guided by our values and our unwavering commitment to delivering unrivalled fund management services.

As we embark on another year, we look forward to walking hand in hand with our clients, partners, and employees. Together, we will navigate the changes ahead and continue to safeguard the retirement outcomes entrusted to us.

Here’s to a successful year ahead.
 
 
 
     
 
TILMAN FRIEDRICH'S INDUSTRY FORUM
  
Monthly Review of Portfolio Performance
to 31 December 2025
  
  In December 2025, the average prudential balanced portfolio returned 1.7% (November 2025: 0.6%). The top performer is the Momentum Namibia Growth Fund, with 2.7%. The Allan Gray Namibia Balanced Fund, with 0.9%, takes the bottom spot. Momentum Namibia Growth Fund takes the top spot for the three months, outperforming the ‘average’ by roughly 1.8%. The NAM Coronation Balanced Plus Fund underperformed the ‘average’ by 2.5% on the other end of the scale. Note that these returns are before (gross of) asset management fees.

The Monthly Review of Portfolio Performance to 31 December 2025 reviews portfolio performances and provides insightful portfolio analyses. Download it here... 
 
 
 
 From Hegemony to Multipolar Risk? What Could its
Implications be?
  
  Western political commentary has focused heavily on President Trump's tone, conduct, and utterances, often presenting him as an aberration from accepted diplomatic norms. For long-term investors and fiduciaries, however, this focus risks obscuring a more important reality: U.S. geopolitical objectives have shown remarkable continuity across administrations, irrespective of diplomatic style.

From a trustee and investment-governance perspective, it is therefore imprudent to assume that a change in leadership or rhetoric in Washington would fundamentally alter the global economic or geopolitical backdrop. The strategic objective of maintaining Western primacy, political, financial, and military, has remained broadly unchanged since the end of World War II...

Read paragraph 6 of the Monthly Review of Portfolio Performance to 31 December 2025 for an interesting perspective on the global political and economic backdrop. Download it here...
 
 
 
The FIM Act – a new start
Contributed by Carmen Diehl, C.A.(Namibia),
Senior Manager: Risk Management and Compliance
 
 


 
The FIMA (Act 2 of 2021) was promulgated in Government Gazette no. 7645 on 1 October 2021. The Minister of Finance has not yet set an effective date. In the last several newsletters, we have presented brief overviews of the latest status on standards and regulations. We continue the series in this newsletter.
 
This summarises the main provisions of draft standards and regulations under the FIM Act and implications for retirement funds.


Standards Chapter 10: General

GEN.S.10.11 Institutional investment

This Standard applies to all insurers, reinsurers, funds, friendly societies and medical aid funds registered under the Act (hereafter “Investing Institution(s)”).


Summary:
  • The Standard outlines the required considerations in the investment process and the contents of an investment policy statement.

  • Investment Policy Statement: Investing Institutions must maintain a detailed written investment policy covering investment objectives, asset allocation, decision-making roles, mandates, fees, and risk management.

  • Board Accountability: The board is ultimately responsible for investment decisions and must act with care, skill, and in compliance with all laws and the Investing Institution’s investment policy statement.

  • Decision-Making: Investment decisions must be made by qualified and authorised individuals, with expert advice sought when necessary.

  • Investment Strategy: Strategic asset allocation must align with liabilities and risk tolerance, considering all major asset classes, including unlisted investments.

  • Expertise: Boards must ensure they or their advisors have sufficient expertise, and contracts for experts must be competitive and market-related.

  • Written Mandates: Boards must enter into formal written investment mandates with investment managers, which must be in accordance with Standard No. GEN.S.10.12 – Content of Investment Mandate.

  • Shareholder Activism: Investing Institutions must have an explicit policy on whether it allows member activism and proxy voting, ensuring actions support long-term economic interests and avoid conflicts of interest.

  • Performance & Benchmarks: Boards must set appropriate benchmarks, assess investment performance annually, and evaluate whether active management justifies the risks taken.

  • Investment Oversight: Boards must maintain control over assets, ensure proper custodial arrangements, prevent unauthorised encumbrance, and keep assets separate and properly recorded.

  • Reporting: Investing Institutions must publish their investment policy statement and the results of monitoring advisors, investment managers and other experts annually and explain any deviations from the investment policy statement to stakeholders, including NAMFISA.

What to do:

  • Investing Institutions should review and update their investment policy statement to ensure it includes all required elements.

  • Investing Institutions should formalise written investment mandates with managers, in line with Standard No GEN.S.10.12.

  • Trustees should obtain training on fiduciary duties and legal compliance under the FIM Act.


GEN.S.10.12 The content of investment mandates

This Standard applies to every Investing Institution and every investment manager registered under the FIM Act that is a party to an investment mandate.

Summary:

  • An investment mandate, and all amendments thereto and renewals thereof, must be in writing and must be signed by the Investing Institution and the investment manager before the mandate commences.

  • The Investing Institution must assess the appropriateness and adequacy of the provisions of an investment mandate, considering key factors such as investment objectives, expected returns, and risk tolerance.

  • The investment mandate must define the investment manager's duties, set out the asset classes in which investments may be made as well as limits thereto, and define benchmarks and valuation methods.

  • The investment mandate must address responsibilities and obligations of investment managers and custodians, ensure asset separation, and performance of duties by investment managers in compliance with legal requirements.

  • The investment mandate must stipulate the provision of monthly statements and quarterly portfolio reports to the Investing Institution, both reports complying with the minimum requirements set out in the standard.

  • Investment mandates must outline fee structures and the responsibility for transaction-related costs.

  • Risk management provisions in the investment mandate must include the possibility of loss by the Investing Institution, the policy of the investment manager on risk management and internal controls, the requirement of investment managers to acquire fidelity guarantee insurance, and procedures to be followed in the event of a breach of any of the terms of the investment mandate by either party.

What to do:

  • Investing Institutions should draft or update existing written investment mandates in compliance with this Standard.

  • Investing Institutions should assess service provider readiness in compliance with this Standard.

Afterthoughts on my FIMA Journey

So, after a long wait, FIMA has finally become a reality. After more than two decades of drafts and revisions, starting with a total overhaul of the old Pensions Funds Act by local experts, all of which was discarded, and then adopting a new approach of calling in foreign experts, it is worth pausing to reflect on what this development means for our retirement industry.

FIMA remains a clear example of how first-world regulatory standards, however well-intentioned, can become misaligned with the realities of a small developing economy. Namibia’s retirement system is built almost entirely on voluntary employer-sponsored funds, not on compulsory state social security as seen elsewhere. When complex regulatory structures are introduced without adaptation to this context, the unintended costs are ultimately borne by ordinary pension fund members, whose interests the FIMA intends to protect. While the intention was to move from a compliance to a risk-based supervisory system, the industry is now facing over 600 compliance requirements, many of which have been sanctioned with multi-million-dollar penalties!

A longstanding concern has been the nature of consultation. NAMFISA considers its process thorough, yet many stakeholders found the engagement instructional rather than collaborative. Employers, whose voluntary participation has for decades provided the only meaningful social safety net for thousands of workers, were not meaningfully brought along. Under FIMA, they face heightened risks and professional liabilities, which are likely to discourage their continued involvement.

On preservation, the dramatic halt of regulation RF.R.5.10 remains fresh in public memory. One politically influential person single-handedly stopped the regulation in its tracks! In principle, some form of compulsory preservation is unavoidable and globally supported. But it must be proportionate, accommodate Namibia’s socioeconomic realities, and include sensible exceptions. A model similar to South Africa’s two-pot system is far more likely than the rigid version originally proposed by our foreign experts.

Internationally, there is no universal requirement for compulsory preservation in voluntary arrangements. Institutions such as the ILO, OECD, and World Bank endorse preservation as good practice, but they do not prescribe strict rules. Hard preservation regimes are rare, and several were temporarily relaxed during COVID-19.

NAMFISA’s mandate is important and necessary. But as FIMA continues its journey, the regulatory process would benefit greatly from deeper collaboration with those who build, fund, and operate the system every day. Namibia needs a framework that balances prudential oversight with practical, local realities; one that strengthens retirement provision rather than unintentionally weakening its foundations.

These are my personal views only; I hold no official position.

Where is the National Pension Fund heading?
 
In his welcoming message at the top of this newsletter, our managing director refers to the latest developments regarding the National Pension Fund. The envisaged structure now falls fairly and squarely within the ILO framework, unfortunately, ignoring the tripartite consensus reached over many years of tough negotiations between employers, trade unions and the government! It is as if our government has a bottomless pit of funds or believes it can do without the private sector and, ultimately, does not subscribe to a free market economy. It is a flawed assumption that employees and employers will absorb the additional cost of 15.9% of payroll, minus whatever can be saved on current pension fund contributions. The net contribution rate, after any savings on existing scheme contributions, will be added to the products and services, making our economy substantially less competitive. It is doubtful that the government will reduce its contributions to the GIPF or reduce employees’ salaries to account for their share of the total contribution. If that happens, the government will have to find an additional N$600 million per year!

The fact that the government and its agencies mandate environmental impact studies for any infrastructure project but do not seem to consider them necessary for any socio-economic project is interesting. Perhaps the socio-economic environment is not considered ‘environment’?

Here is an outline of the fund as currently envisaged by MLIREC.
Provision Proposed design
Coverage All employed persons in the formal sector (Mandatory), including civil servants. Covers only service after the inception date.
Options:
Mandatory coverage for the informal sector
Pension formula 1.33% of each year’s insurable earnings, revalorised until
retirement, based on the increase in the average insurable
earnings of all NPF members
Options:
1.50%, 1.75%% and 2.00%
Normal Retirement Age Pension payable without reduction from age 60
Options:
58, 62 and 60 adjusted in the future based on an increase in life Expectancy.
Early Retirement Possible from age 55 with a pension reduced 6% per year of early Retirement.
Death after retirement The pension will be discontinued, and a % of the pension will be paid to the survivors. 50% if 1 dependent, 75% if 2 dependents and 100% if 3 dependents or more. If one of the dependents is the spouse, 50% goes to the spouse, and the other dependents share the rest equally.
Death before retirement Pension to survivors = Accrued pension at time of death multiplied by the following ratio: (Years of contribution at death + 60 – age at death) / Years of contribution at death 2
Disability before retirement Pension is calculated in the same manner as the survivor 
pension in case of death before retirement.
Minimum number
of years of contribution for entitlement to a pension
Retirement pension: 15 years of contribution to the NPF. Disability and survivors’ pension: 5 years of contribution to the NPF.
If not entitled to a pension: lump sum = 6.25 time the accrued pension
Options:
Retirement pension: 0 and 10 years
Minimum pension For Retirement, Disability and Death: N$ 500/month after 30
years of contribution, 60% of that amount, with only 10 years of contribution (0% before that), + 2% per additional year of
contribution, up to 100% after 30 years.
In case of retirement before age 60, reduced in the same way as for early retirement.
Options:
None, N$ 750, N$ 1,000
Funeral benefit None
Option:
N$10,000
Indexation of pensions in payment
Retirement, disability, and survivors’ pension are indexed every year based on the increase in Consumer Price Index (CPI). If the increase in CPI exceeds 7%, indexation is capped at 7% and the excess will be granted in later years when the CPI increases will be less than 7% (However, pensions which are lower than the full minimum pension always indexed at full CPI)
Initial past
service credits
None
Option:
Yes, for members above age 45 at inception
Insurable
earnings ceiling
None
Options:
N$ 9,000, N$ 12,000 and N$ 15,000
Insurable earnings general exemption from contribution No employees’ contribution on earnings below N$ 300/month.But earnings below N$ 300 are considered for calculating the Pension.Options:0, N$400, N$ 500
Contribution rate Based on actuarial valuation: 15.91% to be shared between workers and employers. Suggested add-ons available to members of the NPF.
Suggested add-ons available to members of the NPF
Savings
component
Members would be offered the possibility to save in an individual accountaccount for up to 3% of their insurable earnings (1.5% mandatory employer and 1.5% voluntary by workers).Options:1) Reduce the accrual rate from 1.33% to 1.00% in the pension component to finance the savings component.2) Allow commuting 1/3 of the pension at retirement, in addition to or in replacement of the savings component.
Loans component to NPF members A portion of the NPF reserve (5.0% to 7.5%) would be dedicated to loans to NPF members, prioritising NPF members with earnings below a given level.
Savings & Loans Facility Setting-up a Savings & Loans Facility with access limited to the NPF members
 

Leadership as Service: A Lesson for Regulators
True authority is earned through integrity, empathy, and partnership — not control. Brand Pretorius’s leadership philosophy offers timely guidance for public institutions tasked with oversight and trust.

 
In the talk I dwelled on in Benchtest 11.2025, Brand Pretorius distils a lifetime of leadership experience into one simple truth: leadership is a privilege of service, not a platform for power. He reminds us that authentic leaders derive authority not from title or position, but from moral credibility — the trust they earn by putting people first.

This message resonates far beyond the corporate world. It speaks directly to those who hold public office, supervisors, regulators, and enforcers of the law, whose mandates exist to protect and uplift the very stakeholders they regulate. In the pensions industry, this includes members, funds, trustees, and service providers, all of whom depend on a regulator that leads with integrity, empathy, and fairness.

Too often, however, public authorities lose sight of their founding purpose. Bureaucratic reflexes replace dialogue; procedure overshadows proportionality. When a regulator’s interactions are perceived as punitive rather than constructive, or when unilateral directives replace consultation, trust erodes. Oversight without service becomes oppression in disguise.

Pretorius’s notion of servant leadership offers a necessary corrective. Just as he believed a CEO should see his employees as partners in purpose, so too should regulators see their stakeholders not as subjects of control, but as collaborators in a shared mission — to safeguard retirement security and sustain confidence in the financial system.

The difference between serving authority and authoritative service lies not in function, but in attitude. A regulator that listens, explains, engages and yields to other views earns far more compliance than one that commands.

Parallels Between Corporate Leadership and Public Service

 
Dimension Corporate Servant
Leadership (Brand
Pretorius)
Public Sector / Regulatory
Application
(NAMFISA and others)
Purpose Enable employees to perform and grow. Empower funds and trustees to fulfil fiduciary duties effectively.
Authority base Moral credibility earned through integrity. Statutory authority legitimised through fairness and transparency.
Decision-making Guided by values and empathy. Guided by law and proportional discretion.
Stakeholder relationship Partnership and mutual respect. Collaboration with industry stakeholders for shared outcomes.
Ultimate goal Sustainable success through people. Sustainable compliance and trust in the regulatory system.
“Leadership is about service, not status.” — Brand Pretorius, “In the Driving Seat”

Oversight must be exercised with stakeholders, not over them.

Pretorius suggests that “Leadership is about service, not status.” The same must hold for public institutions whose legitimacy rests not on the coercive power of legislation, but on the voluntary trust of those they oversee. For Namibia’s pensions industry to flourish, regulators must embrace the mantle of servant leadership, firm in purpose, but humble in service.
 
  
COMPLIMENT
 
 
 
Compliment
from a member  
Dated November 2025

 
 
“Wow, that was fast. Thank you so much for being kind and patient. I appreciate the assistance and guidance you have provided and may you all be prosperous and well on the road ahead as the year draws to an end.”
  
 
Read more comments from our clients, here...
 
 
  
BENCHMARK: A NOTE FROM GÜNTER PFEIFER
 
  Circulars issued by the Fund  
 

The Benchmark Retirement Fund issued the following circular after last month’s newsletter: 
  • 202504 – Principal Officer’s year-end message 
Clients are welcome to contact us if they require a copy of any circular.
 
 
NEWS FROM RFS
 
RFS reappointed as Fund Administrator
 
  We are delighted to announce that the following funds reappointed RFS as fund administrator during 2025: 

NBC Retirement Fund
MTC Retirement Fund

We are furthermore excited about the GIZ (Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit) having resolved to join the Benchmark Retirement Fund as of 1 January 2025!

Our focus on transparency, exceptional reporting, and superior service is a strong differentiator in the market and speaks to the importance of providing value to clients beyond just a low-cost proposition. By prioritising sound industrial relations and promoting the employer’s employment philosophy, RFS is positioned to help its clients attract and retain the best staff in a competitive labour market.

The motto of providing rock-solid administration that lets clients sleep in peace greatly reflects the level of commitment and dedication that RFS brings to its work. It is clear that RFS is not just a service provider but a true partner in helping its clients achieve their goals and objectives.

Having successfully converted all our private funds to the Everest administration platform, our loyal clients should now start reaping the benefits of our hard work to get there and the new technology the platform offers.

We wish the NBC Retirement Fund, the MTC Pension Fund, and the GIZ all the best in their new and renewed partnerships with RFS and continued success.
 
  
RFS welcomes New Staff
 
 
We are delighted to announce that the following ladies will join our permanent staff on 1 February 2026, upon successful completion of their probationary periods.

Sandy Tuyenikelao Kamati
Debbie Ndjodhi

Sandy holds a Bachelor's degree in Accounting and Finance and a Bachelor of Business Management (Honours) degree from UNAM. She joined us from Old Mutual, where she served as an assistant fund accountant. She will meaningfully strengthen the private fund accounting team with her skills and experience.

Debby matriculated in 2010 at Hochland High School. She began her studies at NUST in 2011. She took up employment with Momentum in 2015 as a pension fund administrator. Debby completed her Diploma in Accounting and Finance at NUST in 2021.

We extend a warm welcome to Sandy and Debbie! We look forward to their contribution in helping our clients rest easy, knowing that RFS’s team of experts is attending to their retirement business. We are confident that their friendly, outgoing personalities will be valuable additions to our team and our clients, and we wish them all the best in their new positions.

Staff improving their competencies
 
 
RFS prioritises the ongoing education and professional development of its staff. As Nelson Mandela once said, “education is the greatest equaliser,” and by investing in the education and training of its employees, RFS is helping to create a more skilled and knowledgeable workforce.

By supporting its staff in their pursuit of further education, RFS is also investing in the long-term success of its business. As staff members become more skilled and knowledgeable, they are better equipped to provide high-quality service to clients and to help the company stay competitive in a rapidly changing market.

We also heartily congratulate Veueza Kangueehi on obtaining an MPhil in Development Finance from Stellenbosch University! We wish Veueza continued success. May this be another milestone on the road to greater heights!

 
Other Staff News
 
 
RFS celebrates the following other staff developments and congratulates the concerned staff members:
  • Vincent Shimutwikeni on his election to the RFIN board of directors.
  • Annemarie Nel on her appointment to the RFS Financial Advisers board of directors.
  • Denise Kukero on her marriage to Stanley Kandji
  • Richardene Samuels on her engagement to Elgeno Gamatham
Good luck to all of you and all the best for the road ahead!
 
Elevate your fund experience with EPIC
 
 
Members of funds administered by RFS can now access our EPIC communication platform, provided the trustees agree to make it available to members.

Members can access their benefits and investment values online from anywhere at any time.
 
Members of the Benchmark Retirement Fund take note that they have similar functionality through Benefit Counsellor.
 
We encourage our fund members to make the best use of these facilities.


 
The RETIREMENT COMPASS
 
 
RFS Fund Administrators sponsor this newsletter as part of their social responsibility and initiatives to support the retirement fund industry. It aims to provide members of funds managed by RFS Fund Administrators and other parties in their network with retirement funding and planning-related news and insights, presented understandably.
 
The latest issue covers the following insightful articles: 
  • Your Retirement Fund made simple - Part 1: What it is, how it works and how your money grows;
  • Real Member Journey: How a Retirement Fund Helped Ndapewa Build Her Future;
  • Why Updating Your Beneficiaries Can Spare Your Family Unnecessary Hardship.
Don’t miss out on the latest Retirement Compass (vol 2, no 3) here...
 
 
Important circulars issued by RFS
  
 
RFS issued the following circulars since our previous newsletter::
  • RFS 2025.11-10 RFS Completing the Migration Journey – A New Era for Your Fund’s Administration.
Clients are welcome to contact us if they require a copy of any circular.
 
 
  
LEGAL SNIPPETS
 
Pension Funds and the Access to Information Act
Contributed by Vincent Shimutwikeni, B. Juris, LLB (honours), CGRC-BP™,
Manager: Legal Support

 
 
When allocating benefits to a deceased member’s dependents, trustees would sometimes require claimants to substantiate an entitlement to benefits for being a biological child of the deceased through a DNA test. Such DNA tests are costly, and unless provided by a claimant at their own cost, the test results are the property of the fund. Is a claimant entitled to demand that the fund discloses the test results, and would they find support for such a demand in the Access to Information Act, should they be dissatisfied with the trustees’ decision based on the test results?

At present, there is no legal framework in Namibia that obliges the Fund to disclose DNA test results to a claimant or to any other third party. While the Access to Information Act 8 of 2022 (GG 7986) was passed by Parliament and signed into law on 29 November 2022, it has not yet been brought into force. The Act will only become operational once a commencement date is determined by the Minister and published in the Government Gazette. Although regulations were issued in 2024, implementation remains dependent on the appointment of an Information Commissioner, which has not yet taken place. Accordingly, the Act is not yet legally enforceable and does not currently create disclosure obligations.

Even if the Access to Information Act were in force, it would not support disclosure in this matter. The Act expressly allows refusal of access where:
  • The record contains personal information of a third party.
  • Disclosure would constitute an unreasonable invasion of privacy; and
  • The information is medical, health-related, or biologically sensitive.
DNA test results fall squarely within these protected categories.

Furthermore, Article 13 of the Namibian Constitution guarantees the right to privacy. DNA results represent some of the most intimate and sensitive forms of personal information, as they contain biological and identity data. Courts have consistently treated such information as deserving the highest level of protection.

In addition, under common law principles of confidentiality, medical and biological test results are inherently confidential. Any person or institution holding such information, including a pension fund or its administrator, has a duty not to disclose it to third parties without lawful justification, the data subject's consent, or a directive from a competent authority.

While trustees have a statutory and fiduciary duty to ensure that adequate and appropriate information is communicated to members and beneficiaries regarding their rights and benefits, this duty does not extend to disclosing sensitive third-party biometric or medical information.
 

Update on the Electronic Transactions Act
Contributed by Vincent Shimutwikeni, B. Juris, LLB (honours), CGRC-BP™,
Manager: Legal Supporty

Our article on the Electronic Transactions Act in the Benchtest 11.2025 newsletter gained tremendous attention, particularly on LinkedIn. For those interested in this topic, it is appropriate to provide an update.

On 19 December 2025, Government Notice No. 8814, Government Notice No. 335, titled Electronic Signature Regulations: Electronic Transactions Act, 2019, was published. In terms of this Notice, the Minister of Information and Communication Technology, acting under section 20 read with section 58 of the Electronic Transactions Act, 2019, has formally made detailed Electronic Signature Regulations following a completed rule-making process conducted by the Communications Regulatory Authority of Namibia (CRAN).

Importantly, however, the Regulations are expressly stated to come into operation only on the date of commencement of section 20 of the Act.

As section 20 of the Electronic Transactions Act has not yet been brought into force, the Regulations are not operational at this stage. Accordingly, while the regulatory framework for accredited and recognised electronic signatures is now in place, its practical application remains contingent on the formal commencement of section 20.

In the interim, the legal position outlined in the previous newsletter article remains relevant: electronic signatures are not prohibited and may be relied upon, provided they meet the statutory requirements of identification, intention, and appropriateness for purpose.

 
Trusts in Namibia After the Trust Administration Act, 2023 – What Practitioners Should Note
 
Namibia’s Trust Administration Act 11 of 2023 represents a significant shift in the regulation and supervision of trusts, driven largely by the country’s international anti-money-laundering commitments and its response to Financial Action Task Force (FATF) concerns. While the Act tightens governance and disclosure requirements, it does not diminish the continued relevance of trusts as an estate-planning tool.

Trusts remain fully recognised under Namibian law, whether created during a person’s lifetime (inter vivos trusts) or through a will (testamentary trusts). The key change lies not in their validity, but in how and when they become operational. All trusts must now be formally registered with the Master of the High Court, trustees must be authorised before acting, and trusts are subject to ongoing regulatory oversight.

Inter vivos trusts must be registered during the founder’s lifetime before any assets can lawfully be administered. Testamentary trusts, commonly used to protect inheritances for minor children, come into existence only upon death but must then be registered and brought into compliance before administration may proceed. In both cases, the same governance standards apply once the trust is operational.

A central feature of the new framework is enhanced trustee accountability. Trustees are now subject to explicit statutory duties, including record-keeping, maintaining trust bank accounts, tax compliance, preparing financial statements, and—critically—the disclosure of beneficial ownership. These measures are intended to prevent the misuse of trusts as an opaque or anonymous vehicle.

For estate planning purposes, the practical message is clear: drafting a trust deed or will alone is no longer sufficient. Proper planning must also anticipate post-creation registration, beneficial ownership declarations, and ongoing compliance. Existing wills that create testamentary trusts remain valid, but trustees and executors must ensure that these trusts are registered and administered in accordance with the new Act once it comes into effect.

Overall, the Act introduces a more transparent and disciplined trust environment without undermining the legitimate use of trusts. With informed planning and compliance, trusts continue to serve as an effective mechanism for asset protection, inter-generational planning, and long-term financial security.

The full article can be accessed at this link (attached as BT 12.2025 Trusts...PDF).
 
   
SNIPPETS FOR THE PENSION FUND INDUSTRY
 

What is your performance benchmark?
Contributed by Tilman Friedrich, RFS chairperson
 
 
As more and more retirement funds have moved to specialist investment mandates, fund members no longer know whether their fund’s investment performance has been good, average or poor. Once on a specialist investment mandate, a fund must determine its exposure to, and benchmarks for, its asset classes and sectors, and measure its performance relative to the specific asset class and sector performance. The benchmarks are very fund-specific, and competitors’ performance cannot be compared on a like-for-like basis, as each fund uses different benchmarks.

This raises the question of whether the trustees and fund members should be satisfied with the fund's returns. The fund may have outperformed its benchmark but underperformed its peers.

Typically, trustees are guided by their investment consultants when constructing a benchmark portfolio used to calculate the fund's benchmark return. But do trustees really have an in-depth understanding of how their benchmark portfolio is built and how the particular portfolio structure will respond to varying market conditions? Do trustees really know if the benchmark portfolio truly captures the desired outcomes for the fund’s investments under different market conditions? It is great if the fund outperforms its peers, but should it have outperformed, given the specific circumstances? Should trustees not be concerned about outperforming their own benchmark, as this may indicate the portfolio is taking on higher or lower risks than intended? Trustees who set their fund’s benchmarks must understand the impact of those benchmarks on its returns relative to peers, or they risk being criticised for failing their fiduciary duties.

We would suggest that, despite any internal benchmarks, every fund whose membership represents a normal demographic profile should also measure its performance against that of its peers, which in essence means ‘best practice’ for funds with a normal demographic profile. Ideally, the investment consultant would analyse and explain the performance differences between the peer manager and the benchmark portfolio through an attribution analysis. The attribution analysis would show where the fund under- and overperformed relative to its peers, as a result of either holding more or less in any particular asset class and sector.
 
 

Five Surprises Every Retiree Faces in Their First Year
  

 
The first year of retirement often brings unexpected adjustment challenges that extend far beyond the financial modelling typically done before retirement. According to retirement specialist Hardi Swart, the transition involves significant behavioural, emotional, and lifestyle shifts that retirees frequently underestimate.

The five recurring surprises are:

1. Retirement feels like a reset, not a reward
The shift from decades of structure to open-ended days can initially feel unsettling. Many retirees experience a period of recalibration as they work to establish new routines and sources of purpose.

2. Relationship dynamics change
Couples often face tension as daily proximity increases and long-standing household roles are renegotiated. Effective adjustment requires proactive communication and a balance between shared and independent time.

3. Identity must be redefined
For retirees whose identity was closely tied to their profession, the loss of a role can create a temporary sense of disorientation. Those who transition best find new missions, such as mentoring, volunteering, or part-time consulting.

4. Social circles contract without deliberate action
Retirement naturally reduces spontaneous workplace interaction. Maintaining social well-being requires intentional effort to build new networks through clubs, community groups, and intergenerational friendships.

5. Financial planning becomes more complex after retirement
Retirees must continually adapt to issues such as medical inflation, exchangerate volatility, tax efficiency, regulatory change, and portfolio longevity. Retirement planning must remain dynamic, not static.

Read the full article by Hardi Swart in Moneyweb of 19 January 2026 here.

 
 
  
SNIPPETS OF GENERAL INTEREST
  
Helping your spouse prepare for life without you
  
 
In many households, one partner naturally takes responsibility for managing finances, investments, insurance, and administrative matters. While this works well daytoday, it often leaves the surviving spouse vulnerable and unsure where to begin when the financially active partner passes away.

Empowering a spouse with knowledge, structure, and access ensures they can manage confidently during an emotionally difficult time. This requires shifting the approach from “provider” to “planner”—helping ensure that a surviving spouse is not only financially provided for but also practically prepared. Here is a useful guide for achieving the goal:

1. Document the Household Finances
  • Compile a financial “roadmap” listing all accounts, investments (local and offshore), insurance policies, and key documents.
  • Store login details securely using a digital vault or password manager.
  • Record contact details for advisors, administrators, and attorneys.
2. Involve Both Partners
  • Attend financial review meetings together.
  • Ensure each partner understands how income is generated and will continue.
  • Encourage questions and create financial familiarity.
3. Simplify and Consolidate
  • Reduce the number of bank accounts and policies.
  • Consolidate investments on a single platform for visibility.
  • Close unnecessary or duplicate products.
4. Build a Sustainable Income Plan
  • Ensure income can continue smoothly through annuities, investments, or trusts.
  • Structure withdrawals and products in a taxefficient manner.
  • Confirm medical aid and insurance will remain funded.
5. Maintain Adequate Liquidity
  • Keep accessible cash for immediate expenses.
  • Plan explicitly for estate costs and taxes.
  • Consider structures that provide quick payouts when needed.
6. Provide Guidance Beyond the Will
  • Write a personal “letter of wishes” outlining intentions and values.
  • Explain why decisions were made to avoid uncertainty or conflict.
7. Choose a LongTerm Planning Partner
  • Work with a financial planner who understands the family and can guide the surviving spouse over time.
Read the full article by Hardi Swart in Moneyweb of 11 November 2025 here.
 
 
 
Things you should never include in your will
 
 
A will is a legal document that distributes your assets according to your wishes. Including inappropriate provisions can cause confusion, delays, and even litigation. Here are key items to avoid:

What NOT to include:
  • Funeral instructions – Wills are often read after the funeral; communicate these separately.
  • Assets held in a trust – These are managed by trustees and cannot be bequeathed.
  • Life policy proceeds with nominated beneficiaries – These pay directly to beneficiaries, bypassing the estate.
  • Retirement fund benefits – Trustees allocate these under Section 37C of the Pension Funds Act.
  • Jointly held assets in community of property – You can only bequeath your share.
  • Unlawful or unreasonable conditions – Courts will disregard impractical or restrictive clauses.
  • Digital assets governed by service agreements – Use separate instructions or digital legacy tools.
  • Illegal or unenforceable bequests – These will not be honoured and may complicate administration.
  • Pet care instructions without funding – Always provide financial support for pet care.
  • Personal grievances or disputes – Keep your will objective to avoid family conflict.
Consult a qualified fiduciary or estate planning expert to ensure your will aligns with South African succession law and provides clarity for your loved ones.

Read the full article by Hannah Myburgh in Moneyweb of 25 August here.

 
 
  
AND FINALLY...
  
Wise words from wise men
  
  "The secret of success is to do the common things uncommonly well.” JD Rockefeller (1839 - 1937)  
 
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Disclaimer
Whilst we have taken all reasonable measures to ensure that the results reflected herein are correct, Benchmark Retirement Fund and RFS Fund Administrators (Pty) Ltd do not accept any liability for the accuracy of the information and no decision should be taken on the basis of the information contained herein before confirming the detail with the relevant portfolio manager.
 
  
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