April 2026, From the Field
Investment capabilities in defined contribution (DC) plans are entering the next phase of their evolution. As innovation in private markets accelerates and policy shifts signal a more supportive regulatory backdrop, DC plan sponsors and their advisors are increasingly asking not whether private asset integration is possible, but whether it is practical, prudent, and aligned with participant goals.
We believe that a broader investment universe—one that includes certain private asset classes—can offer better outcomes for plan participants, particularly when accessed through well‑constructed, professionally managed multi‑asset solutions. However, from the investment case to operational considerations, properly evaluating opportunities for private asset exposure requires a thorough understanding of the current landscape and what may come next.
The primary challenge of DC plan investing remains the same: helping participants accumulate enough assets for a confident retirement that can last decades. The structural pressures facing retirement savers—including insufficient savings rates, the financial effects of increased life expectancy, and the persistent erosion of purchasing power—have not eased. If anything, they have intensified (Figure 1).
These realities mean that investment strategies must do more of the heavy lifting to help participants reach their retirement goals.
1 Source: T. Rowe Price, Global Retirement Savers Study. Q: About what percentage of your personal income, if any, do you expect to contribute to your 401(k) plan in the next 12 months? Q: What percentage of your income, if any, do you expect your employer to contribute to your retirement account in the next 12 months? n = 3,001. As of July 2025.
2 Source: Social Security Administration, as of January 2026.
3 Based on assumed inflation rate of 2% over a 30-year period and is comparing ending earnings to starting earnings.
The evolution of multi‑asset retirement portfolios reflects this enduring challenge. Since becoming the dominant qualified default investment alternative (QDIA), target date solutions have expanded well beyond their foundational stock‑and‑bond allocations. Portfolio construction has become more sophisticated to incorporate additional asset classes, refined glide paths, and broader sources of risk‑adjusted returns that can potentially enhance diversification and improve durability across market environments (Figure 2).
The ability to incorporate private assets as building blocks in target date and other multi‑asset solutions represents a continuation of this tradition. The need for growth, diversification, and thoughtful risk management has not changed. What has—and what will likely continue to evolve—is the opportunity set available to pursue these objectives.
Source: T. Rowe Price.
The suitability of private assets in DC plans has at times been debated. However, the fundamental value proposition has remained consistent: the potential to enhance diversification and returns.
Ultimately, private assets must earn their place in DC plan portfolios. We believe that any allocation, whether public or private, should demonstrate unique net‑of‑fee benefits within the context of the broader portfolio. Inclusion should improve expected participant outcomes in a measurable way, without undermining liquidity management, fee discipline, or fiduciary responsibility.
Public markets today look different than they did a generation ago. Equity indices have become increasingly concentrated, with a growing share of returns driven by a small number of large companies. At the same time, the number of publicly listed firms has declined, as many companies have opted to access capital outside traditional exchanges and stay private longer (Figure 3a). Debt markets have also experienced structural changes, shaped by institutional demand dynamics and the availability of customized financing outside traditional bond sectors.
As of December 31, 2024.
Source: World Federation of Exchanges
Source: Ocorian, “Global infrastructure assets rise to record $1.22 trillion.” February 4, 2026.
Meanwhile, private markets have surged in size and scope (Figure 3b). Private equity, private credit, infrastructure, and direct private real estate now represent a significantly larger portion of the global investable universe than they did two decades ago. For long‑term investors, this shift raises an important strategic question: whether excluding private markets limits access to meaningful segments of economic growth.
Inclusion should improve expected participant outcomes in a measurable way, without undermining liquidity management, fee discipline, or fiduciary responsibility.
The regulatory and product landscape is also evolving. Private assets have long played a role in many DC plans, for instance through equity strategies that tactically invest in companies prior to their public listing. However, uncertainty around regulatory interpretation and potential litigation risk has curbed broader integration of private assets.
More recently, policy moves and industry engagement have signaled greater willingness to address these barriers. Structural innovation—such as evergreen funds, which offer periodic liquidity and long‑term exposure to private markets—has made private asset integration more operationally compatible with DC requirements, including daily valuation and participant transactions.
Taken together, these developments are reshaping the feasibility conversation. The DC industry is increasingly focused on real‑world implementation, carefully assessing how private assets may fit within diversified, professionally managed multi‑asset solutions.
Introducing private asset allocations in target date portfolios offers additional tools to pursue diversification and return objectives.
Private equity, private credit, infrastructure, and private real estate each introduce differentiated return drivers.
When combined thoughtfully with public equities and bonds, these exposures can add diversification benefits due to differences in economic drivers and market dynamics.
(Fig. 4) Private asset class overviews
| Private equity | Private infrastructure | Private credit | Private real estate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| What it is | Equity stakes in private companies across business stages and investment types | Ownership in physical assets and systems needed for functioning societies | Loans (often floating rate) negotiated between lenders and companies | Direct investment in physical properties |
| Includes secondaries and co-investments | Includes toll roads, pipelines, utilities, etc. | Diverse funding structures | Includes residential, mixed use, and industrial | |
| Key considerations | Less liquid than public counterparts | Low liquidity | Usually less liquid than public debt | Low liquidity |
| Longer-term capital commitment | Regulatory and operational risks | Less transparency than public markets | Requires active property and tenantÊmanagement | |
| Role in portfolio | Long-term growthÊpotential | Can offer resilience across macroeconomic cycles | Income generation | Can provide attractive, stable income potential |
| Opportunity for enhanced absolute returns | Mix of income and/or long-term growth | Potentially reduced volatility relative to public fixed income | Hedge against unexpected inflation | |
| Focus on capital preservation |
Source: T. Rowe Price.
1 The nature of traditional private equity investing can lead to a performance pattern known as the J-curve. This requires investors to prudently manage their cash flows and capital needs and, from a DC plan sponsor perspective, could involve additional management activity that sponsors may not be accustomed to or interested in assuming. See the Definitions section for additional detail.
Structural innovation...has made private asset integration more operationally compatible with DC requirements....
Evaluation on the part of investment managers and plan sponsors must be rigorous. Appraisal‑based valuations can smooth reported volatility in private markets, but investment managers should acknowledge the underlying economic risk and understand true correlations, particularly in stressed environments. Moreover, manager performance dispersion in private markets has been pronounced, making skilled active management and disciplined due diligence critical to outcomes.
In the context of target date solutions, providers are generally responsible for selecting which private market allocations meet the threshold for inclusion and for underlying manager selection, while plan sponsors/fiduciaries and/or their consultants and advisors retain responsibility for selecting the target date provider.
Our survey data and industry engagement suggest that interest in private assets is real but measured (Figure 5). Plan sponsors and consultants consistently cite diversification and return enhancement as primary objectives when evaluating private asset strategies. At the same time, implementation appetite varies across different private market exposures and by plan size.
Source: T. Rowe Price, 2026 DC Plan Sponsor Retirement Trends Study.
In our research, private credit emerges as the most likely private asset to be implemented, selected by 43% of plan sponsor respondents.
Importantly, fees, liquidity constraints, benchmarking challenges, and litigation risk are identified as top barriers to implementation (Figure 6). While many plan sponsors see the possible benefits of offering DC plan investments that include exposure to private assets, they are seeking clarity on these aspects and expect them to be sufficiently addressed.
Consultant/advisor data: T. Rowe Price, 2025 Defined Contribution Consultant Study. Plan sponsor data: T. Rowe Price, 2026 DC Plan Sponsor Retirement Trends Study. See Appendix for study methodology. Litigation risk was not offered as a response option for consultants/advisors.
1 Other responses, consultants/advisors: Difficulty in conducting proper due diligence, employee tenure mismatch with alts time horizons, litigation risk.
Other responses, plan sponsors: Participant understanding of the option, litigation risk.
If private assets are to widely gain traction in DC plans, their implementation vehicle will matter as much as their investment case. The strongest consensus points toward professionally managed, multi‑asset solutions—particularly target date strategies and, to a lesser extent, managed accounts—as the most practical entry points. These structures centralize governance, manage liquidity within a diversified framework, and reduce the risk of participant misuse associated with stand‑alone options.
For plan sponsors, the evaluation of private assets ultimately returns to fiduciary fundamentals. Any allocation must be assessed for its potential contribution to participant outcomes, its value proposition, and its operational feasibility. Liquidity management, manager selection, cost reasonableness, and participant communication all require careful consideration. Additionally, within the context of target date solutions, it is important to understand the role the private market building block is expected to play and how it evolves across a glide path to align with participants’ investment objectives and time horizon to retirement.
As policy discussions evolve and product innovation continues, prudence remains the guiding principle. The integration of private assets, if pursued, should reflect a documented, research‑driven process grounded in participant best interests, consistent with how fiduciaries evaluate any other investments offered in a DC plan. The opportunity is compelling, but fiduciary discipline remains non‑negotiable. Portfolio durability, liquidity management, cost discipline, and governance standards must remain intact.
T. Rowe Price DC Plan Sponsor Retirement Trends Study: The survey was fielded from October 21–December 4, 2025. Data reflect responses from 136 plan sponsors that have a role in overseeing and/or selecting their organization’s DC plan investment offerings. Survey respondents were not aware that the research was sponsored by T. Rowe Price, and they are not necessarily T. Rowe Price clients.
T. Rowe Price Defined Contribution Consultant Study: The study was fielded from January 13–March 10, 2025. Participating in the 2025 study were 36 of the leading consultant and advisor firms (81% consultant and 19% advisor, based on self-identification of firm types) with over 136,000 DC plan sponsor clients and representing nearly $9 trillion in assets under advisement (AUA), based on self‑reported figures.
T. Rowe Price Global Retirement Savers Study (GRSS): The 2025 GRSS surveyed 7,010 adults age 18+, representative of the population of workers (on age, gender, and region) contributing to a defined contribution (DC) or similar account‑based workplace retirement plan. 1,000 (or slightly more) adults per market were surveyed, except in the U.S., where 3,001 adults were surveyed. The data are weighted to provide equal representation across all countries.
Mar 2026
In the Loop
Investment Risks
Private investments are typically speculative and exposed to a high degree of business and financial risk. They may be leveraged and engage in speculative practices that increase the risk of investment loss and cause performance volatility.
Definitions
The J-curve performance pattern reflects early losses during an initial investment period in which committed capital from investors is called and deployed by the investment manager, followed by gradual gains through a latter-stage harvesting period in which the manager generates and returns profits stemming from business improvements.
Visit troweprice.com/glossary for definitions of additional financial terms.
Additional Disclosure
CAIA® is a registered certification mark owned and administered by the Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst Association.
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