Balanced Investment Co. founder Suresh Basnet specializes in values-centered investing and is a certified meditation coach.
The financial services industry now has the green light to offer private equity, hedge funds and non-traded REITs in your 401(k). While this sounds like democratization, it’s actually a warning sign that demands your attention.
An August 2025 executive order expanded access to alternative investments in retirement accounts—products that were previously available mainly to wealthy investors with substantial assets. As someone who has spent decades helping clients navigate complex investment decisions, I’ve seen firsthand how these “exclusive” opportunities often deliver exclusive disappointment.
The question to ask yourself isn’t whether you legally can invest in these products; the question is whether you should. Here’s what this policy shift reveals about where your retirement priorities need to be.
The Hidden Costs Of ‘Exclusive’ Access
Private equity and alternative investments share three troubling characteristics that make them particularly problematic for retirement accounts: opacity, illiquidity and fees that compound into fortune-draining expenses.
Consider the fee structure. Traditional mutual funds typically charge an annual fee of 0.5% to 1%. Private equity funds often charge 2% management fees plus 20% of profits—the infamous “2 and 20” structure. Over a 30-year retirement savings period, assuming 7% annual returns before fees, a 2% annual fee difference on a $500,000 portfolio could cost you hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost returns due to the compounding effect of fees over time, as demonstrated by SEC fee analysis tools.
But fees are just the beginning. These investments often require a commitment of five to 10 years or longer. What happens if you need funds for medical expenses at age 68, but your money is trapped in a private equity fund that won’t mature until you’re 73? Liquidity isn’t a luxury in retirement—it’s essential for responding to life’s unpredictable demands.
The transparency problem is equally concerning. When I review clients’ statements, I can clearly see what they own in traditional mutual funds: which companies, which sectors and what percentage of each. Private equity investments offer no such clarity. You’re trusting managers to make good decisions with your money while providing minimal disclosure about what they’re actually doing.
A Better Path: Values-Aligned Investing
Here’s what strikes me as particularly ironic: While policymakers expand access to opaque alternative investments, they’ve simultaneously taken aim at ESG investing—an approach that offers transparency, liquidity and alignment with long-term value creation.
ESG investing doesn’t mean sacrificing returns for values. Research from institutions such as Morgan Stanley and the NYU Stern School of Business indicates that companies with strong ESG practices tend to exhibit better operational performance, lower volatility and superior long-term returns. A recent meta-analysis of over 1,000 studies found that the business case for ESG is empirically solid, with 58% of studies showing positive relationships between ESG and financial performance.
ESG-focused strategies operate under a dual mandate: Generate strong financial performance while encouraging corporate responsibility. They’re liquid—you can sell when needed. They’re transparent—you know exactly what you own. And they align with the values many investors care about. It’s a triple win.
What You Can Do Today
If you’re between 55 and 65—the sweet spot where retirement planning becomes urgent—here are specific actions you can take to protect your nest egg:
1. Audit your retirement account options.
Request a complete list of investment choices in your 401(k). If private equity or alternative investments appear, ask three questions: What are the total annual costs? What are the liquidity terms? What is the historical performance compared to simple index funds?
2. Calculate your fee impact.
Use the SEC’s mutual fund cost calculators to compare costs and fees. If an alternative investment charges 2.5% annually versus a traditional fund charging 0.5%, that 2% difference could reduce your retirement balance by 30% over 25 years.
3. Prioritize simplicity.
The Balanced Life Index—a framework I developed to help clients make better financial decisions—emphasizes that your portfolio should support peace of mind, not create anxiety. Complex investments that you don’t understand work against this goal, regardless of promised returns.
4. Consider ESG alternatives.
If you want investments that reflect your values, ESG-focused mutual funds or ETFs are potential options. Major providers now offer ESG options with expense ratios of 0.25% or less.
5. Demand fiduciary standards.
Ask whether your financial advisor is legally required to act in your best interest. Fiduciary advisors must prioritize your needs over their commission opportunities—a crucial distinction when evaluating complex investment products.
The Real Issue: Financial Health In Context
My work as both a financial advisor and meditation coach has taught me that proper financial security comes from balance, not complexity. People often look to money to solve problems it cannot solve. It will keep you busy, but it won’t bring you peace.
The push toward alternative investments in retirement accounts likely reflects the financial services industry’s pursuit of new revenue streams, not policymakers prioritizing your security. Private equity firms often earn substantial fees from these products, which may reduce the focus on your returns.
Your retirement planning should integrate financial strategy with other life dimensions, including health, relationships and purpose. This is what I call finding meaning in your money. A portfolio packed with opaque, illiquid investments that generate anxiety and confusion doesn’t support this integration. It undermines it.
Moving Forward
As this policy change takes effect, expect aggressive marketing of “exclusive” investment opportunities. The sales pitch will emphasize high returns and limited access. What won’t be emphasized: the fees, the lock-up periods and the fact that simple, low-cost index funds would likely serve most investors better.
Changing the way people think about their 401(k)s can transform how they approach their entire financial lives. That change starts with rejecting complexity for its own sake and demanding investments that serve your actual needs.
Your retirement security is too important to gamble on products designed primarily to generate fees for financial services firms. Choose transparency. Choose liquidity. Choose investments you understand. That’s not just sound financial advice—it’s the foundation for a balanced life.
The information provided here is not investment, tax or financial advice. You should consult with a licensed professional for advice concerning your specific situation.
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