Retail access to private credit and private equity strategies is expanding globally. These assets may offer diversification and return potential, but they introduce risks that differ fundamentally from public markets.
The most underappreciated is valuation lag.
Unlike publicly traded assets that are continuously marked to market, private assets are typically marked to a model and updated periodically. During periods of volatility, reported net asset values may lag materially behind economic reality.
This creates two concerns. First, reported performance may appear smoother than underlying risk warrants. Second, stale pricing can create arbitrage opportunities: informed investors may redeem at outdated valuations, transferring losses to those who remain once adjustments occur.
Recent market episodes suggest that retail investors are often less prepared for the illiquidity, gating mechanisms, and valuation discretion embedded in private strategies. Strong valuation governance is therefore essential.
Independent oversight, periodic external reviews, and transparent disclosure of methodologies are not procedural formalities. They are safeguards against unfair outcomes and erosion of investor confidence.





















