Navigating Risk in Retail Investment Funds
Retail investment products are evolving faster than the rules designed to govern them. As derivatives become more common, settlement cycles shorten, and private market strategies move closer to the retail market, traditional categories such as “simple versus complex” or “liquid versus illiquid” no longer tell the full story.
For investment professionals, the key question is no longer whether a product uses sophisticated tools. It is whether its risks are properly understood, fairly allocated, and effectively governed in practice.
Recent global regulatory reforms — including The International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO)-inspired initiatives and new policies in the United States and Europe — reflect this shift. But beyond the technical detail lies a broader takeaway: managing risk, liquidity, and valuation is not a compliance exercise. It is central to investor protection.
Why Counting Derivatives No Longer Works
One of the most visible changes in global retail fund regulation is the move away from simply counting derivative exposure toward broader portfolio risk measures such as Value-at-Risk (VaR).
Historically, many frameworks drew a hard line between “complex” and “non-complex” products based on notional derivative limits. While straightforward to apply, this approach often misrepresents economic reality. A fixed-income fund that uses interest rate derivatives to manage duration, for example, may appear “derivative-heavy” on paper even though those instruments are designed to reduce overall portfolio risk, not amplify it.
[....]