You Don’t Need to Look Far for an Alternatives Education

Andrea ModyAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

In the last two years, financial advisors have faced an array of challenging market conditions: high inflation, rising interest rates, market volatility, recession concerns, a rocky bond market and geopolitical instability. With pressures to deliver the long-term returns and yield that their clients have come to expect, financial advisors are looking for ways to reposition traditional 60/40 listed equities and fixed income portfolios. But without education on how to implement an allocation to private markets investments, many advisors are waiting on the sidelines despite the clear benefits of allocating.

Why aren’t more advisors taking advantage of them?

Private markets have historically been an institutional asset class. Pension funds, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds, and foundations and endowments have relied on sizable private asset class allocations for several decades. These investors need steady, reliable returns over the long term, and by and large, private markets have delivered regardless of short-term market fluctuations or economic cycles. But retail private wealth has allocated 2% (or even less) to alternatives traditionally. With investors looking for new areas in which to invest and innovation in product structures, there is now increasing sentiment and opportunity for that allocation to rise. Private-wealth investors are beginning to realize alternative sources of steady returns are available to them and can be a desirable way to provide resilience to their clients’ portfolios.