Optimism has been a rare commodity in financial markets in 2011. However, institutional investors don’t have the luxury of being able to place their cash under the bed, although given that money market rates are at virtually zero in US dollars and sterling, and at negative real (after inflation) rates in both those currencies and euros, that is pretty much what placing funds on deposit is equivalent to at the moment.

Pessimism about the state of the economy affects the corporate industrial sector too, but its response is generally to hold off on making capital investments and wait for the situation to improve. Institutional investors have to place their cash somewhere. But where exactly? A previous article in this column noted the dwindling range of genuinely risk-free assets, which poses its own problems, but with rates already at rock bottom, the yields on government bonds will only be rising over the long term. Investors looking outside the risk-free space aren’t confronted with that many healthy options.