Trump’s order lets any 401(k) buy private equity and crypto, but average fees of 2-and-20 and multi-year lock-ups can erase the diversification edge for balances under $500 k. Savers who cannot ill-afford a 20% drop or who might need cash before age 59½ should stay with low-cost index funds.
What the August 2025 order actually changed
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on 8 Aug 2025 directing the Department of Labor to classify private equity, crypto, real estate, private credit and commodities as “qualified” 401(k) assets, reversing a 2020 DOL letter that had effectively blocked them White House. Record-keepers can now add exchange-traded funds that hold these alts without breaching fiduciary rules, opening the door for Fidelity, Schwab and Vanguard to market such products to 70 million plan participants.
Higher returns? The data is patchy
Cambridge Associates’ U.S. private-equity index shows a 14.3% annual net return from 2000-2023 versus 9.8% for the S&P 500, but that outperformance collapses to 0.8% after the typical 2% management fee plus 20% carried interest is layered on J.P. Morgan. Crypto is worse: Bitcoin’s 230% surge in 2023 was followed by a 48% drawdown in 1H 2025, a volatility level that turns a 60-year-old’s $300 k nest egg into a $156 k headline overnight.
The liquidity lock-up nobody talks about
Most private-equity vehicles require a 7- to 10-year commitment with only quarterly redemption windows and gate provisions. Meanwhile, 401(k) participants tap their accounts for hardship withdrawals, first-home purchases or simply roll over when switching jobs. An alts-heavy balance can force investors to sell at secondary-market discounts of 10-15% or trigger early-withdrawal penalties on the portion that remains trapped.
Fees that eat the tax advantage
A 35-year-old contributing $20 k a year into a 0.05% S&P 500 ETF ends retirement with roughly $2.1 million (6% gross return). Swap that for a 2-and-20 private-equity fund inside the same 401(k) and the ending balance drops to $1.45 million—a $650 k haircut that dwarfs any diversification benefit unless the alts deliver 18%-plus net every single year.
Who actually benefits
- Participants with balances above $500 k who can afford a 5-10% satellite allocation without jeopardizing liquidity.
- Ultra-long horizons: workers under 40 who will not touch the money for 20+ years and can ride out vintage-year volatility.
- Plans that negotiate institutional share classes (sub-1% management fee) or use low-cost, interval-style ETFs instead of draw-down funds.
Who should steer clear
- Anyone within 10 years of retirement who needs predictable sequencing of withdrawals.
- Employees at startups or in cyclical sectors where lay-offs—and the need for IRA rollovers—are common.
- Participants who already hold company stock or crypto outside the 401(k); doubling down creates concentration risk instead of diversification.
Portfolio math: the 5% rule
Academic studies from NYU’s Stern School show that once alts exceed 5-8% of a liquid portfolio, the Sharpe ratio flattens even if correlations stay low. Translation: putting 20% of a $150 k 401(k) into a crypto PE fund does not triple your risk-adjusted return; it simply triples your chance of a forced fire sale the next time BTC drops 30%.
Bottom line
Trump’s order gives the masses keys to the country-club locker room, but the jacket still doesn’t fit most backs. Unless your balance is large, your timeline is long and your record-keeper has negotiated rock-bottom fees, the smartest move is to keep the core of your retirement in broad, low-cost index funds and leave the alts casino to endowments and sovereign funds.
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