Advisors Start Cramming to Meet Growing Private Market Demand
Private markets have the potential for great returns, and they have historically outperformed public ones. Many advisors steer clear of them, however, partially because of limited knowledge about how they actually work. It's an information gap many will have to address sooner rather than later.
Apollo Global Management CEO Marc Rowan believes that allocations to private equity and private credit will make up a third of client portfolios in the near future. 'The vast majority of financial advisors may not go to private markets directly, [but] they will buy products that give them access to public and private markets,' he said during a Q&A at the Morningstar Investment Conference last week.
If advisors are to stay competitive in Rowan's vision of the future, many are going to need a private markets crash course.
READ ALSO: Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill' Is a 'Mixed Bag' for Advisors and Advisor Teams Are Getting Bigger. Here's Why
Right now, advisors allocate an average of just 5% of clients' portfolios to alternatives, compared with 25% by institutions, according to Fidelity. Part of the gap is due to limited access, since private markets are typically restricted to accredited investors. But unfamiliarity also plays a big role. Private markets are complicated territory.
'You can't just enter a ticker on a platform and execute transactions,' said Laura Lutton, head of manager research at Morningstar, adding that private market investments often require separate investment platforms and client agreements. 'It creates a structural friction that keeps advisors reluctant to get involved,' she told Advisor Upside.
Private markets also come with lower liquidity, less transparency, and complex fee structures — challenges that can be difficult to explain to clients. 'It sounds simple, but it's really not,' Lutton said. Morningstar is working to make those conversations easier by expanding its Medalist Rating framework later this year to include semiliquid funds, offering more transparency and helping identify strategies likely to outperform certain benchmarks.
While, private markets may seem daunting, but advisors don't have to go it alone:
One way advisors can become more familiar with private equity and private credit is through sponsors themselves. Major firms like BlackRock, KKR, iCapital and more offer CE credits through alternative investing courses.
The CFA Institute also offers multiple courses and certifications on private markets.
Do Your Homework. Some advisors are taking the independent study approach, like Alex Caswell of Wealth Script Advisors, who's been reading books and scholarly articles published in the CFA Institute's Financial Analysts Journal to understand whether the investments would be right for his clients. So far, he's not sold on them, especially private credit.
'PC has swallowed up a lot of the fast-and-loose loan and debt origination that was done by banks pre-2008,' he told Advisor Upside. 'Now, these PC funds are being shoved into portfolios left and right, and it comes with a lot of unevaluated risks that people aren't realizing.'
This post first appeared on The Daily Upside. To receive financial advisor news, market insights, and practice management essentials, subscribe to our free Advisor Upside newsletter.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
6 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Odd Lots: Emily Sundberg on How Nobody Is Coming to Save Gen Z
What do young professionals in New York City actually think about money and capitalism? According to our guest Emily Sundberg, creator of the Feed Me newsletter, there is a foreboding sense that nobody is coming to save them. End times are coming. AI will take all the jobs. There's a limited time to "secure the bag." In this live episode, recorded in New York City in June, Emily talks about how this translates into consumption and investing decisions among today's youth, and how they see the world of politics.


Forbes
15 minutes ago
- Forbes
FBI Issues US Social Media And Messaging Warning — What To Know
Beware of ramp and dump attacks, the FBI warns. It has been, without any shadow of a doubt, a busy few days regarding Federal Bureau of Investigation warnings concerning cybercrime. On June 30, the FBI issued an alert for the aviation industry that attackers from the Scattered Spider ransomware group were shifting their attention to this industry sector. By July 2, that FBI warning had become a stark reality as Qantas confirmed it had fallen victim to a 'cyber incident.' Now, the FBI has issued a public service advisory, as cybercriminals are using social media platforms and messaging apps to target U.S. stock investors with a ramp-and-dump fraud. Here's what you need to know. FBI Warns Of Ramp-And-Dump Frauds Using Social Media And Messaging Apps FBI Public Service Advisory I-070325-PSA, dated July 3, has warned the general public that cyber criminals are targeting anyone in the U.S. who is investing in stocks with a ramp-and-dump fraud that is initiated through the use of social media platforms promoting investment clubs. Many of the members of these so-called clubs have, upon investigation, turned out to be fake accounts, and active members are likely to be mostly bot-operated accounts. The social media posts, the FBI said, 'typically direct victims to secure messaging apps where the group operates.' And if you are already to dismiss victims as the easily fooled, the FBI goes on to warn that the attackers are impersonating 'legitimate brokerage firms or well-known stock analysts,' to create an air of respectability and, more importantly, trust. 'So far in 2025, the FBI has seen at least a 300 percent increase in victim complaints referencing ramp-and-dump stock fraud from 2024,' the FBI warned, revealing just how much of a problem this has become, hence the urgent need for the advisory. The criminals will have control over a relatively large volume of relatively low-priced stocks, and the aim of the fraud is to get investment club members to purchase shares over weeks or months in order to inflate the price. This is the ramp bit of the fraud involved. The dump comes into play once a suitably over-inflated price has been achieved and the fraudsters sell all their stock at a profit, with the investment club members left holding a fair bit of nothing at all as the price crashes. FBI Advice On How To Identify Ranp-And-Dump Stock Fraud The FBI advisory recommended that investors look to recognise the following indicators of ramp-and-dump schemes: Readers are urged to report any such incidents to the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center at as soon as possible.


Bloomberg
21 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
UniCredit Starts Reducing Stake in Generali, Repubblica Reports
UniCredit SpA has started reducing its stake in Assicurazioni Generali SpA in recent days as part of the Italian bank's plan to exit the insurer over time, Repubblica newspaper reported. The total amount of shares sold by the Italian lender would correspond to less than 1.5% of Generali, according to the paper on Saturday. UniCredit owned 6.49% of Generali's capital as of April, the paper said.