Private Markets Boom, But Not for Everyone
ARTICLE SUMMARY
Private market assets (like direct private equity or credit) are growing in popularity for their potential to deliver diversification and higher returns, but they lack the liquidity and transparency of public markets.
The illiquidity risk is a major concern: many private investments cannot be sold before maturity, and even “liquid alternatives” may only offer quarterly or monthly redemption windows.
Suitability depends on financial capacity and psychological readiness — investors should have sufficient liquid assets, a strong public-market foundation, and the patience to ride through periods of low liquidity.
Private markets may remain a niche option: while institutional and ultra-high-net-worth investors often treat them as core holdings, for most accredited investors they are best used modestly as a complement to (not a replacement for) public market exposure.