The $20 trillion private markets boom—and what it actually means for regular investors
There’s a certain type of finance content that goes: “The wealthy know something you don’t! Here’s the secret investment strategy they’re using!” It’s almost always garbage designed to sell you a course or newsletter.
But there is something real happening in how institutional investors—think pension funds, university endowments, and wealthy family offices—are allocating money. They’re increasingly moving away from traditional stocks and bonds into what finance people call “alternative investments” or “private markets.”
The private markets sector is projected to grow from $13 trillion in 2024 to over $20 trillion by 2030. That’s not hype—that’s institutional money moving in a specific direction for specific reasons.
Let’s talk about what’s actually happening, why it matters, and whether any of this is relevant to people who aren’t managing billion-dollar portfolios.
What Even Are “Alternative Investments”?
The jargon-free version: Alternatives are basically anything that isn’t publicly traded stocks or bonds.
The main categories:
Private Equity: Buying entire companies (or significant stakes) that aren’t listed on stock exchanges. Think: a firm buys a struggling chain of restaurants, restructures it, and sells it years later for a profit. Long time horizons, less liquidity, potentially higher returns.
Private Credit: Lending money directly to companies instead of buying their bonds on public markets. Like being the bank instead of investing in bank stocks. Offers higher interest rates but comes with more risk and less liquidity.
Real Estate: Actual property investments—commercial buildings, apartment complexes, warehouses, data centers. Not REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) that trade on stock exchanges, but direct ownership or private funds that own properties.
Infrastructure: Investing in toll roads, bridges, renewable energy projects, cell towers, water systems—the physical stuff that makes modern life work. Usually generates steady, predictable cash flows.
Why the fancy term “alternatives”? Because for decades, the standard portfolio was stocks and bonds (the famous “60/40 portfolio”—60% stocks, 40% bonds). Everything else was “alternative” to that baseline.
Why Institutions Are Moving Money Here
The traditional 60/40 portfolio worked great for a long time. Then several things happened:
Problem 1: The stock-bond correlation broke Historically, when stocks went down, bonds usually went up (or at least stayed stable), which balanced your portfolio. In recent years, they’ve increasingly moved together—both down at the same time. That’s bad for diversification.
Problem 2: Low bond yields When interest rates were near zero, bonds paid almost nothing. Even with recent rate increases, institutional investors needed better returns to meet their obligations (like paying pensions).
Problem 3: Volatility everywhere Public markets have gotten choppier. Inflation worries, geopolitical tensions, rapid policy changes—the predictable patterns that worked for decades feel less reliable.
The institutional response: Look for returns and diversification elsewhere. Private markets offered both—theoretically, at least.
Private Equity: The Headliner
Private equity has been the star performer of alternatives, which is why it gets the most attention (and the most controversy).
The pitch: Private equity firms can take longer-term views because they’re not subject to quarterly earnings pressures. They buy companies, improve operations, and sell years later. Historical returns have been strong—often beating public stock markets.
The reality:
- High fees (typically 2% management fee + 20% of profits)
- Your money is locked up for years (often 7-10 years)
- Access historically limited to institutions and ultra-wealthy individuals
- Returns are lumpy—a few big winners generate most returns, many investments are mediocre
- The “private equity premium” (extra returns vs. public markets) has been shrinking as more money piles in
Where the money’s going: Tech, healthcare, and “transformative growth sectors”—basically industries where private ownership can enable bigger changes than public market scrutiny would allow.
The uncomfortable truth: Private equity firms have gotten very good at financial engineering (clever debt structures, tax optimization, etc.) which contributes to returns but doesn’t necessarily create broader economic value. This is why some people love PE and others think it’s destructive.
Real Estate: The Tangible Asset
If private equity is the flashy star, real estate is the steady veteran that’s been doing this forever.
Why institutions like it:
- Physical assets with intrinsic value: Buildings exist. You can touch them.
- Steady income: Commercial tenants pay rent monthly.
- Inflation hedge: Property values and rents tend to rise with inflation.
- Low correlation to stocks: Real estate doesn’t automatically tank when the S&P 500 drops.
What’s hot in private real estate:
- Data centers: AI boom = massive need for computing infrastructure
- Warehouses and logistics: E-commerce requires distribution centers everywhere
- Multifamily housing: There’s undersupply in many markets, steady rental demand
- Infrastructure-adjacent properties: Cell tower sites, renewable energy land, etc.
What’s not: Traditional office buildings in many markets (thanks, remote work) and some retail (though this varies).
The catch: Real estate requires serious capital, expertise in local markets, property management headaches, and isn’t liquid—you can’t just sell a warehouse next Tuesday because you need cash.
Private Credit: The Bond Market Alternative
This is less sexy but increasingly important.
The basic idea: Instead of buying bonds that trade on public markets, you lend money directly to companies. Could be straightforward business loans, or more complex stuff like distressed debt (lending to struggling companies at high interest rates).
Why it’s growing:
- Higher yields than public bonds
- Floating rates (interest payments adjust with rate changes)
- Less volatility than stocks
- Diversifies income streams
The risks:
- Less liquid than public bonds (harder to sell)
- Less transparency (no public ratings or daily pricing)
- Default risk (companies can fail to pay you back)
- Requires expertise to evaluate credit risk
Who’s doing this: Mostly institutions and very wealthy individuals. It’s not accessible to regular retail investors, and for good reason—it requires significant due diligence and risk management.
The Democratization Narrative (And Its Limits)
Here’s where finance marketers get excited: “Private markets are being democratized! Now YOU can invest like institutions!”
What’s actually happening:
- New fund structures and platforms are lowering minimum investment amounts
- Some private REITs and interval funds are available to accredited investors (high net worth, not billionaires)
- Technology platforms are making access easier for financial advisors
What the democratization hype misses:
- Most of these investments still require being an “accredited investor” (roughly $200k+ income or $1M+ net worth excluding home)
- Fees remain high relative to public market alternatives
- Liquidity is still limited—your money is tied up
- The complexity requires genuine expertise to evaluate
The honest take: Access is broadening, but we’re talking about people with $500k to invest being able to access products previously requiring $5M+, not regular people with $10k in their Robinhood account suddenly investing in private equity.
Should Normal People Care About Any of This?
Probably not directly, but here’s why it matters indirectly:
1. This affects the economy When trillions flow into private markets, it changes how companies get funded, which businesses thrive, and how employment works. Private equity firms are major employers—their decisions affect real jobs.
2. Your retirement fund might be involved Many pension funds and institutional investors are allocating more to alternatives. If you have a pension, some of your future retirement might depend on these investments performing.
3. It influences public markets When institutional money leaves public markets for private ones, it affects stock valuations, market liquidity, and investment dynamics even if you only own index funds.
4. Real estate affects everyone Institutional ownership of housing (like single-family rental portfolios) influences housing affordability and availability, regardless of whether you’re an investor or just trying to rent an apartment.
The “Can I Actually Do This?” Question
Let’s be brutally honest about whether regular investors should chase private markets:
You probably shouldn’t if:
- You have under $100k to invest total
- You might need the money within 5-10 years
- You’re still figuring out basic investing (maxing retirement accounts, emergency fund, etc.)
- You don’t understand the specific investment being offered
- The fees are above 1.5-2% annually
- You don’t have other investments providing liquidity
You might consider it if:
- You’re an accredited investor with significant assets
- You have a diversified portfolio already
- You genuinely understand the illiquidity risk
- You’re working with qualified advisors (not randos on YouTube)
- The specific opportunity makes sense for your situation
- You can afford to lose the entire investment without materially impacting your life
Better alternatives for most people:
- Public REITs (liquid, transparent, accessible)
- Real estate crowdfunding with smaller minimums (still risky, but more accessible)
- Private real estate in your local market if you’re willing to be a landlord
- Sticking with diversified index funds and not worrying about “alternatives”
The Infrastructure and Climate Angle
One genuinely interesting trend: infrastructure investments are booming, particularly in renewable energy and digital infrastructure (data centers, fiber optic networks, etc.).
Why this matters:
- These investments often have long-term, stable cash flows (tolls, subscriptions, energy contracts)
- They align with climate goals and transition to clean energy
- They’re building the physical backbone of the digital economy
The opportunity and challenge: Trillions need to be invested in infrastructure globally. Private capital is increasingly filling gaps that governments can’t or won’t fund. This creates investment opportunities, but also raises questions about privatizing essential services.
If you care about climate, the infrastructure build-out in private markets is where significant capital is flowing—more than most people realize.
The Skeptic’s Reality Check
What’s real:
- Institutional investors are genuinely allocating more to private markets
- These assets can provide diversification and different return profiles
- Access is slowly broadening beyond the ultra-wealthy
- The sector is growing significantly ($13T to $20T+ is real growth)
What’s overblown:
- The idea that “democratization” means regular people should pile in
- Claims that private markets are inherently superior to public ones
- Suggestions that you’ll “miss out” if you’re not invested in alternatives
- Marketing that glosses over fees, illiquidity, and complexity
What’s complicated:
- Returns data from private markets is often biased (failing funds disappear from databases)
- Illiquidity can be a feature (forces long-term thinking) or a bug (you’re stuck)
- High fees eat returns—you need significant outperformance to justify them
- Access is improving, but appropriate access requires sophistication most people don’t have
The Bottom Line for Regular Investors
The movement of institutional capital into private markets is real and significant. It reflects genuine issues with traditional portfolios and legitimate opportunities in private investments.
But this is largely an institutional and high-net-worth story, not a retail investor story—at least not yet, and maybe not ever for most people.
Your actual takeaways:
- Understand what institutions are doing and why, but don’t assume their strategies translate to your situation. They have different time horizons, liquidity needs, and risk tolerance.
- If you’re not already nailing the basics (maxed retirement accounts, emergency fund, diversified low-cost index funds), chasing alternatives is putting the cart way before the horse.
- Real estate can make sense for many investors, but probably through direct ownership of rental properties or liquid REITs rather than illiquid private funds—unless you’re genuinely wealthy.
- Be extremely skeptical of anyone pitching “access to private markets” without being transparent about fees, risks, and illiquidity. The finance industry makes a lot of money on this stuff, creating incentives to oversell.
- Boring often beats sexy. A simple portfolio of diversified index funds has made more regular people wealthy than complex alternative investment strategies ever will.
The private markets boom is real. The suggestion that you need to participate in it to build wealth? That’s mostly marketing.
Based on industry data and projections from 2024-2025. This is not financial advice. Alternative investments are complex, illiquid, and not suitable for most investors. Consult qualified professionals before making investment decisions.