The Wall Street Journal

Moody’s Sounds Alarm on Private Funds for Individuals

Chasing retail money could pose risks to investors, private funds and financial system, Moody’s says

Published June 10, 2025 at 9:00 AM ET

BlackRock has spent $27 billion buying private investment funds and data provider Preqin.
BlackRock has spent $27 billion buying private investment funds and data provider Preqin. Photo: Bing Guan/Bloomberg News

Wall Street’s push to sell private-equity and private-debt funds to individual investors risks overheating financial markets and backfiring on firms launching the funds, according to Moody’s Ratings.

Private-fund managers have turned to individual, or retail, investors to offset a decline in money raised from traditional clients such as pensions and endowments. But in a report viewed by The Wall Street Journal, Moody’s warned that selling funds to retail clients will introduce new risks to private-asset managers, including “reputation loss, heightened regulatory scrutiny and higher costs.”