In the institutional investment world, disclosure has never been more abundant. Private placement memoranda swell by the year. Risk factor sections stretch for dozens of pages. Side letters, ESG appendices and regulatory addenda multiply. On paper, everything is disclosed. And yet, recent cycles have made one uncomfortable truth increasingly hard to ignore: Disclosure, even when exhaustive, is not the same thing as risk management.
Disclosure is a legal and regulatory necessity. Risk management is an operational discipline. Confusing the two may satisfy counsel, but it does little to protect capital.
Investors are urged — sometimes sternly — to read the risk factors. Market risk. Liquidity risk. Leverage risk. Key person risk. Valuation risk. Redemption risk. Interest rate ris