New Zealanders and their fund managers can't seem to stomach investing in big, hairy, risky long-term privately funded infrastructure projects.
The failure this week of Pacific Fibre to convince local investors to stump up most of the $500 million needed to build a second optic fibre cable to Australia and the United States is symptomatic of economies with ageing populations.
As savers get older they get more conservative, and they want their assets to be liquid. Retirees worry that they don't have a lot of time to make up for a slump in the value of assets. They also want to know that if they need a hip replacement they can pull their money out quickly.
That tends to drive older investors towards lower-risk investments such as bonds, especially government bonds.
This tendency of ageing investors is fine when they make up a small part of the investing population. But when the group has a heavier weight, and the markets for riskier assets such as shares are volatile for a long time, then the world has a problem.