Institutional investors often describe themselves as “universal owners,” but ownership is not defined by portfolio size, it is defined by behavior.
Across institutional portfolios, legal and contractual protections routinely go unenforced, not because claims lack merit, but because decisions about pursuing them are shaped by competing incentives. In many cases, the same people responsible for maintaining manager relationships, preserving access, and defending past allocations are also deciding whether to pursue recovery.
The result is a structurally uneven system: smaller claims are quietly abandoned, oversight becomes discretionary rather than systematic, and fiduciary responsibility is subordinated to relationship management.
When actionable claims go unpursued, it signals that enforcement is optional. Over time, counterparties adjust to a world in which scrutiny is inconsistent and consequences are uncertain. Weak governance becomes less costly, the consequences of misconduct are increasingly borne by investors, and accountability across markets gradually erodes.
Chief Investment Officers (CIOs), boards, and investment committees should govern legal rights with the same discipline as capital allocation decisions, not leave them to biased, relationship-driven judgment.


















