Back To The Future With Private Investments

 | Oct 23, 2020 08:08AM ET

I often feel like the financial markets are crumbling around me. It’s not their price levels that trouble me, but their health. The capital markets are a tremendous boon to humanity. However, intrusive central bank and government policies seem to strangle the golden geese of capitalism and free markets increasingly.

Some argue that the neurotic obsessions with market stability are killing active investment management and disarming the very mechanisms that make financial markets invaluable. The decline is inevitable; the only question is whether it comes slowly or as a quick collapse. While I’m sympathetic to this perspective, what if we humans are better and smarter than credited? What if the investment markets aren’t dying but evolving to circumvent the unwanted barriers?

Let’s face it; it’s hard being human. The world is highly complex, fret with imperfect information. It isn’t easy to make sense of things. Often, multiple explanations can seem just as plausible, given the same set of facts. As conceptual animals, chaos is paralyzing and uncomfortable.

Perhaps this is why we seek narratives; they help explain phenomena and enable action. However, even the most water-tight narrative can spring a leak, given new information or a different perspective. I’m beginning to see the expansion of private investment markets in this light. I had viewed their growth as negative at first but now think differently.

h3 If It Bleeds It Leads/h3

Investing today is as hard as it’s ever been. Bond yields are the lowest in history. Equities appear overvalued. Alpha—the amount of excess return available to active investment managers—is a mere fraction of what it had been. Everything’s gone passive. There’s no return to be had no matter how hard one tries. Why is this happening?