However, none of this can hide the fact that for the second time in ten years the global equity market has slumped by over 40% (top to bottom) and has wrought havoc among pension funds’ mixed portfolios. The underlying cause of this situation, which has assumed catastrophic proportions in some cases, is neither the bedevilled hedge funds (despite the fact that their returns of –15% to –20% p.a. have fallen well short of their promised «absolute returns»), nor highly volatile commodities, since both were only implemented to a marginal extent (<10%) in the portfolios. The real loss-maker, in most cases, is the portfolios’ 30–40% equity exposure. On close scrutiny, these investments turn out to be essentially unsuitable for investors that are required to report their liquidity ratio annually. There has been virtually no public debate about this issue to date, due in part to the fact that the asset management industry has so far put forward few convincing concepts for limiting the risk of share price drops. In view of the academic debate on «regime shifts», the time is ripe to address this matter and move away from the traditional belief that «equity lows simply have to be accepted and endured».
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