DOL gives green light for private equity in 401(k)s

"Private equity may be part of a prudent investment mix" for these plans, according to a DOL letter.

The Labor Department has given 401(k) plans permission to include private equity strategies within diversified investment options such as target date, target risk or balanced funds.

In an information letter to a law firm representing clients who provide private equity strategies to retirement plans, Labor Department attorney Louis J. Campagna wrote that a plan fiduciary “may offer an asset allocation fund with a private equity component … in a manner consistent with the requirements of Title I” of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.

Related: SEC exploring private equity in 401(k) plans

“This letter should assure defined contribution plan fiduciaries that private equity may be part of a prudent investment mix and a way to enhance retirement savings and investment security for American workers,” said the acting assistant secretary of labor for the Employee Benefits Security Administration, Jeanne Klinefelter Wilson, in a statement. 

SEC Chairman Jay Clayton, in the same statement, said the Labor Department’s decision would provide long-term retirement investors “with a choice of professionally managed funds that more closely match the diversified public and private market asset allocation strategies pursued by many well-managed pension funds.”

The DOL letter, sent to the Groom Law Group on behalf of Pantheon Ventures and Partners Group, allows a private equity option within defined contribution plans but does not require it.

The letter notes “important differences between a fiduciary’s decision to include private equity investments in the portfolio of a professionally managed defined benefit plan, and the decision to include an asset allocation fund with a private equity component as part of the investment lineup for a participant-directed individual account plan.” 

Private equity strategies and structures tend to more more complex, with longer time horizons and higher fees than publicly traded securities, which are the typical investment options in DC plans, according to the Labor Department.

Given those differences, the letter lays out certain considerations for defined contribution fiduciaries to consider before including a private equity option in allocation, including:

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