It appears that nobody asked Cassamatis why he didn't to convert his clients to cash rather than do nothing while the value of their portfolios was decimated.
That is the main question he should have been asked, in my opinion.
If he'd managed the situation by moving clients to cash when the market had fallen by say 25%, and put them back into the market when the recovery got underway, many of them would now be in a pretty good position.
The banks, the global financial crisis, the level of gearing, have all been blamed for the demise of Storm and their clients. The real blame lies with the sheer incompetence of Storm in that they failed to manage the situation.
The economic meltdown and market crash didn't wipe out everyone who had margin loans. Those who were more switched on that Cassamatis had the good sense to retreat to cash in plenty of time to avoid disaster. Cassamatis didn't, and it was this failure on his part, more than any other factor, that caused the wipeout of so many of his clients.
To my way of thinking, this is criminal neglect and he should go on trial for it.
I think he badly misread the situation, and his ego wouldn't allow him to consider he might have been on the wrong track. The storm website used to have a weekly market commentary (which towards the end wasn't being updated weekly at all). I recall reading lots of positive sentiment about China and other developing nations having a huge appetite for Oz resources, and how this was expected to continue for several years. Australia could simply keep selling to China, India etc and it'd be all good. The situation with the sub-prime lending and bank weaknesses in the USA was downplayed as not being that relevant to our market as our banks were so much stronger. I think he totally misunderstood the impact that events in USA would have on our own market - as if Australia's economy was completely disconnected. I also think he failed to grasp the global nature of the downturn until it was well and truly underway, and by then he couldn't afford to get everybody out as he'd be cutting off his income stream. The rest, as they say, is history.
I think this is the kinder option, as otherwise he knew full well what was likely to happen and just didn't care about his clients at all - that makes no sense from a business point of view if he wanted to retain a customer base for the future. Either way, for the fees they charged I expected a much higher level of professionalism. We'd all be better off if he'd used a portion of our fees to educate himself and his advisers in economics and market history instead of wishful thinking.
I must say, all this ranting is becoming quite therapeutic