Your simple growth was 22,2% for the period of +- 4 years (not annualised).
I think collective investments in multi-asset, High Equity category is an appropriate benchmark as that is basically the type of fund you will invest your pension in for the long term.
Over the past 5 years (unfortunately, 4 years not available) the simple growth for the average fund in that category was 27,6%. Over 3 years, the average return was 11,8%. (Source: ProfileData).
You did worse than the best-performing fund in that category, the Long Beach Capital Flexible Fund (51% simple return over 5 years), but better than the worst performers.
Performance would be in line with what local equities returned, but considerably worse than foreign equities in rands. The cumulative (simple) return of the Satrix MSCI World Index unit trust over five years was 74.4%.
Just curious as to why you invest in cash/money market for a TFSA? If you haven't used your annual tax exemption of R23 800, you get zero tax benefits from holding cash in a TFSA.
The asset classes with the most tax benefits in a TFSA:
1. Listed property (high yields, especially at the current low prices, which is usually taxed at your marginal rates)
2. Shares declaring dividends (especially preference shares and high yielding shares, usually taxed at 20%)
3. Money market/cash/bonds, but ONLY if you've already used your interest exemption.
Of course, your TFSA investments form part of your overall portfolia that should be diversified.
I hold ONLY listed property in my TFSA, but that is the only listed property I have and it is not more than 10% of my total investments.