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Retail Investors Risk Ominous Opportunity Cost With Private Investments, Moody’s Warns

Sean Craig

3 min read

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Photo of a BlackRock office

Photo via Richard B. Levine/Newscom

Is Wall Street unwittingly copying Wile E. Coyote’s newfangled traps for the Road Runner by promoting new products for individual investors that will invariably backfire? Maybe so, says Moody’s, which warned this week that increasing efforts to sell private equity and private debt funds to retail investors may not end especially well.

While there’s a chance the movement could open up “higher-return opportunities to ordinary investors” that were previously walled off, the ratings firm sounded the alarm that unmanaged growth “could have systemic consequences.” Risk yourself accordingly.

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The $1.7 trillion private credit, or private debt, market comprises financing from specialized firms, asset managers, private equity shops, and hedge funds that make loans to companies outside of the traditional bank-lending ecosystem. The sector took off after traditional banks pulled back from some risky lending when they were hit with tightened regulations following the 2008 financial crisis. The $4.7 trillion private equity market, meanwhile, involves investing in companies that don’t offer shares on the public market.

Private credit and private equity firms typically raise money for their funds from institutional investors like pensions and endowments. But with the sector exploding in size, private fund managers have launched initiatives to woo more capital by letting individual investors buy into the market through new retail products. In his annual letter to shareholders, Blackrock CEO Larry Fink pledged to open private markets to individual investors and declared it a core growth area for the firm. “Assets that will define the future — data centers, ports, power grids, the world’s fastest-growing private companies — aren’t available to most investors… they’re locked behind high walls,” he said.

More broadly, Moody’s said there is general cause for concern in inviting more individual investors into the private market:

  • First, for the retail investors themselves: “One of the most pressing concerns for ‘Main Street’ investors is liquidity and the inherent lack of it in private markets,” the ratings agency’s analysts wrote. They then warned that, in times of market stress, investors “might not be able to access money at all” from illiquid private assets.

  • They also warned that the handful of large firms that command the private-fund market frequently invest in the same deals, meaning investors could end up with investments that aren’t sufficiently diverse and thus “amplify systemic vulnerabilities.”