An SEC panel declined to endorse any changes to financial criteria often used to determine who can invest in private equity, private credit, real estate and other alternative investments.
The Securities and Exchange Commission’s Investor Advisory Committee
The committee, which has no policymaking power, at one time considered changes to those standards in response to a
Members of the committee instead said that if policymakers ever decide to revise the accredited investor standards, they should consider abandoning the net worth and income thresholds and instead try to gauge investor “sophistication.” They also broached the possibility of allowing investors to qualify as accredited by taking a test.
“One of the chief criticisms of the existing definition is the perception that it unfairly divides the U.S. population into segments that either get unlimited access to the private markets or none at all,” said
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Prying private markets open for retail investors
Although it did not endorse changes to accredited investor standards, the Investor Advisory Committee voted in favor of a series of recommended policy changes designed to further open access to private markets without sacrificing basic safeguards. The vote came amid a push by
That movement received a big boost from President Donald Trump in August when he
That preference for opening private markets is shared by Trump’s handpicked head of the SEC.
Members of the Investor Advisory Committee, though, have reservations. Paul Roye, for example, said that the sought-for “recalibration” “should not undermine any of the three pillars of the SEC’s mission: protecting investors, maintaining fair, orderly, and efficient markets, and facilitating capital formation.”
Recommendations on ‘sophisticated’ investors, investment limits
Among other things, the Investor Advisory Committee’s recommendations concern:
- “Sophisticated” investors. If policymakers alter the criteria for accredited investors, the committee recommended they look for ways to tie access to private markets to investor “sophistication” rather than net worth. The committee suggested opening the markets to holders of certain professional credentials, including certified financial planners, chartered financial analysts, personal financial specialists and certified private wealth advisors. The committee also said that any test used to determine if investors should count as accredited should gauge “the examinee’s ability to understand the unique features and risks of making private market investments, including the importance of diversification.”
- Investment limits. For non-accredited investors, the committee recommended the SEC adopt limits restricting private market investments to 10% of their past year’s income, net worth or total value of their securities investments.
- Appraisals of fund assets holdings. Unlike publicly traded companies, private investments are often valued using third-party appraisals of underlying holdings, whether those be in real estate, loans or firms. The committee recommended that private funds should have to inform investors when these outside appraisers are rejected or replaced and that the public should have more information on how private investment valuations are calculated.
- Closed-end funds. These funds can provide exposure to private markets. They differ from open-ended funds, whose managers can issue and buy back their own shares as much as they want, in issuing shares only once. Last month, Atkins
announced the end of a policy that for more than two decades had placed strict limits on closed-end funds’ ability to access private markets on behalf of retail investors. Since 2002, closed-end funds have been able to put no more than 15% of their total allocations into private investments, unless they were working with accredited investors who can put down at least $25,000. The Investor Advisory Committee expressed support for that policy.
Independent advisors have misgivings
Critics of private markets contend their promise of sometimes lucrative returns are often offset by
Their chief benefit, he said, is that they tend to be uncorrelated with traditional investments in stocks and bonds. When public markets tank, private markets will often hold their value and provide much-needed protection.
That said, he worries regular investors lack the expertise to determine which private investments are suitable. The private opportunities that reach retail investors tend to be ones that sophisticated and wealthy investors have already passed over.
“Typically, the really good deals are already oversubscribed,” Stancato said.
He said he has to spend hours going through disclosures provided by a given private fund before deciding if he should recommend it to an investor. One big consideration is how much a client can afford to lose should an investment not turn out as hoped.
“The key is to make sure: If this thing goes south, it’s not going to ruin you,” Stancato said.
Rich Arzaga, the founder of Real Estate Whisperer Financial Planning in Monument, Colorado, shared Stancato’s skepticism. He noted that criteria for accredited investors, which were established in 1982 and haven’t been adjusted for inflation, are steadily losing their ability to exclude all but wealthy and sophisticated investors from private markets. An SEC staff report released in 2023
“I really feel like the $1 million in assets and the $200,000 or $300,000 in annual income, these are fairly easy to achieve as compared to 20 years ago,” Arzaga said.
The red flag of private market growth
Despite the concerns, money has surged into private equity, private credit, private real estate funds and similar vehicles in recent years. The SEC committee’s proposal noted that private funds managed $28 trillion and private companies raised $623 billion last year. Much of the inflows have come as opportunities to invest in public firms have become scarcer; the number of publicly traded U.S. companies has fallen from 8,000 in 1996 to 3,700 in 2024, according to the SEC.
Gina-Gail Fletcher, a committee member and law professor at Duke University, said something is decidedly out of balance when the best opportunities seem to be in private investments rather than public.
“I believe, to the detriment of us all, the growth in the size of the private markets should signal to us that something is amiss in terms of the balance in the securities markets, when the exception becomes larger than the rule,” Fletcher said during the committee meeting. “I think it’s unsurprising, therefore, that the average investor thinks that they are missing out or being excluded from something that is better, when … the public markets are the gold standard.”
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