Volatility equals opportunity, right? Well maybe, but, according to the research, while 71 per cent of the world's most influential money people believe that is so, only 13 per cent are convinced that they can convert [volatility] into an opportunity".
The study highlights two "hurdles" blocking these professional investors from taking advantage of these historically-significant opportunities.
Firstly, the study says the asset management business has been subject to extreme "industrialisation" over the last 20 years which essentially means it's become more automated, rules-based and algorithmically-inclined while diminishing the role of human judgment.
"The second hurdle is clients' own herd instinct that often ignores the cardinal investment rule: buy low/sell high,"... nothing new there really.
If you thought the herd was rushing about a bit more than the past, then the CREATE report will back you up. Panicked investors are now constantly on the move: "Aided by technology and the 24-hour news cycle, growing globalisation will amplify investor mood swings and compress their decision spans from calendar time to real time."
What are the US$25.2 trillion people going to do about it? Opinions are divided:
5 per cent are 'adventurists' who believe in contrarian investing and market timing amid turmoil.
35 per cent are 'pragmatists' who believe in portfolio re-balancing when momentum is working.
40 per cent are 'purists' who believe in buy-and-hold investing and see volatility as a risky game.
20 per cent are 'pessimists' who lost a bundle in the last decade and can't wait to exit at an opportune moment.
I need to know their granularity before deciding who is right.