Index Annuities Are a Scam

When a salesman can make a $15,000 commission selling a $200,000 indexed annuity, common sense tells you something is wrong.

That money does not magically appear.

It comes from hidden spreads, opaque options pricing, surrender charges, insurance company profits, and risks that most retirees never understand.

I know because I helped build these products at Transamerica.

Indexed annuities are not sophisticated market miracles. They are essentially traditional fixed annuities wrapped with derivatives and marketing gimmicks.

The core structure is remarkably simple.  And they offered inside and outside ERISA plans

The insurer places your money into its General Account (“GA”), the same insurance company balance sheet used for ordinary fixed annuities. The insurer then invests that money in bonds, private credit, mortgages, structured products, and other assets designed to generate a spread.

Suppose the insurer’s General Account earns 7%.

With a traditional fixed annuity, the insurer may credit the retiree only 3%, while keeping roughly 4% as spread profit.

With an indexed annuity, the insurer instead uses part of that 7% return to purchase options or swaps tied to the S&P 500 or another index. Often these options cost around 3%.

That leaves the insurer with the same approximate 4% spread.

Part of that spread funds massive commissions to salespeople. The rest becomes insurance company profit.

The retiree sees advertisements promising “market upside with no downside risk,” but the economics are designed primarily to enrich insurers and distributors.

The entire product is engineered backward from the commission structure.

The problem becomes even worse when retirees believe they are receiving stock market exposure.

They are not.

The insurance company is usually purchasing short-term call options, option spreads, or swaps with severe limitations:

  • Participation caps
  • Spread deductions
  • Volatility controls
  • Complex crediting formulas
  • Annual resets
  • Averaging mechanisms
  • Index substitutions
  • Proprietary indexes

These restrictions dramatically reduce the actual market participation received by investors.

Many in the retail versions discover years later that when the stock market rises 20%, their indexed annuity may credit only 4% or 5%.

Meanwhile the insurer still collects its spread.

The insurance industry markets indexed annuities as “safe,” but the underlying risk remains tied to the solvency and liquidity of the insurer’s General Account.

That means retirees are exposed to:

  • Credit risk
  • Liquidity risk
  • State insurance guaranty limits
  • Complex surrender charges
  • Opaque accounting
  • Illiquid private credit portfolios
  • Commercial real estate exposure
  • Structured finance exposure

The same concerns I have raised regarding fixed annuities inside ERISA plans apply equally — and often more severely — to indexed annuities.

The industry itself effectively admits this in its own lobbying documents.

In comments submitted to the U.S. Department of Labor, the Indexed Annuity Leadership Council argued aggressively that indexed annuity sales should not be treated as fiduciary investment advice under ERISA.

Why?

Because once fiduciary standards apply, the conflicts become impossible to defend.

The industry specifically complained that:

  • commissions create conflicts,
  • rollover recommendations could become prohibited transactions,
  • insurers cannot adequately supervise independent agents,
  • and fiduciary standards would interfere with sales practices.

That is an extraordinary admission.

The indexed annuity industry is essentially arguing:
“We cannot operate profitably under true fiduciary standards.”

The Department of Labor should recognize that indexed annuities present the same fundamental prohibited transaction and conflict concerns as fixed annuities:

  • insurers acting as parties in interest,
  • hidden spreads,
  • conflicted compensation,
  • opaque valuation,
  • illiquidity,
  • and products too complex for ordinary retirees to understand.

The reality is simple.

If a product requires:

  • giant commissions,
  • 100-page disclosures,
  • derivative overlays,
  • surrender penalties,
  • proprietary indexes,
  • and armies of lobbyists arguing they should not be fiduciaries,

it is probably not designed for the benefit of retirees.

It is designed for the benefit of the insurance industry.

PwC Accidentally Says the Quiet Part Out Loud About Private Equity in 401(k)s

The new paper from PwC on private markets in defined contribution plans is one of the more revealing industry documents to emerge in years. Not because it exposes the dangers of private equity in 401(k)s — although it acknowledges many of them — but because it openly frames the issue from the industry’s perspective: distribution, scalability, and fee expansion.  https://www.pwc.com/us/en/industries/financial-services/library/private-markets-401k-defined-contribution.html

PwC writes:

“Yet it’s worth remembering that in DC, winning doesn’t mean being chosen, it means being embedded. And the prize is meaningful, perhaps as much as $19.2 billion in additional annual fees across the industry.”

That sentence should be read carefully by every fiduciary, regulator, and participant in America.

The private equity industry understands something that consultants, target-date fund providers, insurers, and asset managers have spent years engineering: once an investment product is embedded inside a default structure, especially a target-date fund (TDF), participant inertia does the rest.

As I have written before: they repeat

“Distribution is the product, and TDFs are the distribution.”

The industry does not need participants to affirmatively choose private equity. It only needs consultants and recordkeepers to quietly place it inside weak state regulated CIT-based target-date structures where participants never see the underlying risks, valuation assumptions, liquidity constraints, or fee layers.

PwC’s framework identifies five standards for consultant-driven access to DC plans:

  1. Valuation transparency and discipline
  2. Participant and plan-level liquidity
  3. Operational feasibility
  4. Participant experience, risk mitigation, and suitability
  5. Fee justification and disclosure

At first glance, these sound reasonable. In reality, they largely function as a consultant comfort checklist designed to reassure fiduciaries while preserving the underlying opacity that makes private markets profitable in the first place.

The problem is not that the industry ignores the risks. The problem is that the industry acknowledges the risks while redefining them as manageable operational issues rather than structural fiduciary defects.

1. “Valuation Transparency” Without Real Market Transparency

PwC discusses valuation governance and discipline as though the issue is simply creating better procedures around marks.

But the real problem is that private equity valuations are fundamentally non-market valuations.

Unlike mutual funds or public securities, most private assets are not priced daily through actual market transactions. They are model-based, manager-controlled, consultant-mediated valuations that frequently rely on stale marks, internal assumptions, appraisal smoothing, and self-selected comparables.

The entire diversification story behind private equity depends heavily on these accounting conventions.

If private equity were marked continuously to observable market liquidity events, much of the “low volatility” narrative would collapse.

This is why the industry fights so hard to keep private assets inside structures exempt from normal securities transparency standards — especially state-regulated CITs and insurance products.

The issue is not merely whether valuations exist. The issue is whether participants can trust them.

2. Liquidity Risk Is Not a Side Issue — It Is the Core Issue

PwC correctly identifies liquidity as a central challenge. But it understates how dangerous this becomes inside participant-directed retirement plans.

401(k) plans are fundamentally daily-liquidity systems:

  • daily trading
  • daily participant transfers
  • daily loans
  • daily hardship withdrawals
  • daily distributions

Private equity is fundamentally the opposite:

  • long lockups
  • uncertain exit timing
  • manager-controlled realization schedules
  • secondary market discounts during stress periods

The industry solution is to place only a “small sleeve” of private equity inside diversified TDFs and surround it with liquid public assets.

But this does not eliminate liquidity risk. It simply transfers liquidity pressure onto the liquid portion of the portfolio during stress events.

That structure works until participants panic, markets fall, or sponsors face large-scale withdrawals.

At that point, fiduciaries discover that liquidity engineering is not the same thing as actual liquidity.

3. Operational Feasibility Is About Consultant Infrastructure, Not Participant Protection

PwC frames operational feasibility as an administrative challenge:

  • valuation systems
  • transfer restrictions
  • daily NAV calculations
  • recordkeeper coordination

But the deeper reality is that the operational structure exists primarily to make illiquid assets appear compatible with a daily-priced participant-directed system.

The entire architecture is designed to normalize something that does not naturally fit inside ERISA DC plans.

This is where consultants become essential gatekeepers.

The consultant’s role is increasingly not independent fiduciary oversight. It is engineering pathways that allow higher-fee alternative products to gain access to retirement plan assets while maintaining legal defensibility.

That is why consultant-controlled CITs and custom TDF structures have become so important to the industry.

4. “Participant Experience” Is Often Just Risk Camouflage

PwC discusses participant suitability and risk mitigation, but the actual industry strategy is often volatility smoothing through accounting and structure.

Participants are far less likely to object to private equity exposure if:

  • valuations move slowly,
  • losses are delayed,
  • Benchmark comparisons are customized,
  • liquidity stress is hidden,
  • fee layers are buried inside bundled structures.

This creates the appearance of stability precisely because the assets are not continuously market-priced.

In many ways, the modern private-market TDF structure resembles the same “stable until suddenly unstable” dynamic that historically appeared in:

  • insurance general accounts,
  • synthetic yield products,
  • structured credit vehicles,
  • and certain stable value structures before periods of market stress.

5. Fee Disclosure Still Avoids the Real Economics

PwC mentions fee justification and disclosure, but the paper still largely avoids the most important issue:
the economics of the entire ecosystem.

Private equity fees are not limited to a simple “2 and 20” discussion anymore.

The fee stack increasingly includes:

  • private equity manager fees,
  • carried interest,
  • secondary transaction costs,
  • consultant fees,
  • OCIO overlays,
  • valuation vendors,
  • CIT structures,
  • recordkeeper revenue sharing,
  • custom TDF fees,
  • and insurance wrappers.

This is why the industry’s obsession with DC access is so intense.

Even a small allocation inside massive retirement systems creates extraordinary recurring fee streams.

PwC’s own estimate of $19.2 billion in additional annual industry fees may actually understate the long-term economic opportunity.

The Real Goal Is Embedding, Not Selection

The most honest sentence in the PwC paper is the recognition that success in defined contribution plans comes from becoming embedded.

That is exactly correct.

Participants rarely affirmatively choose complex illiquid products.

Instead, the industry seeks:

  • default structures,
  • consultant-approved models,
  • CIT wrappers,
  • custom glidepaths,
  • and bundled fiduciary narratives that make the exposure effectively invisible.

The future battle over private equity in 401(k)s will not primarily be fought over performance.

It will be fought over:

  • transparency,
  • accounting standards,
  • liquidity truthfulness,
  • prohibited transactions,
  • consultant conflicts,
  • and whether fiduciaries can legally place opaque, self-priced, high-fee structures into participant-directed retirement plans.

The devil is not in the headline promises.

The devil is in the accounting, the liquidity assumptions, and the distribution structure.

And PwC’s paper unintentionally confirms exactly that.

 https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/06/07/erisa-private-equity-fiduciary-due-diligence-checklist/

https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/06/07/the-private-equity-business-model-depends-on-secrecy-fake-benchmarks-and-fiduciary-illusions/

Lifetime Income: The Gateway Drug for Insurance Products in 401(k) Plans

I have expressed concern over Morningstar’s promotion of annuity products. https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/01/27/morningstar-the-referee-who-designs-the-insurance-playbook/

 Recently, Morningstar published an insurance industry-friendly report, “Evaluating Target-Date Strategies With Annuities” https://www.morningstar.com/content/cs-assets/v3/assets/blt9415ea4cc4157833/bltd9e4637261d27afb/6a07705cbf17f75ee4e5f1c6/Evaluating_Target_Dates_with_Annuities.pdf  

For years, the retirement industry struggled to push annuities into 401(k) plans. Participants distrusted them. Fiduciaries worried about liability. Regulators remained cautious. Traditional mutual fund structures and SEC accounting rules created barriers around valuation, liquidity, leverage, and fee transparency.

So the industry changed the marketing.

Instead of selling “fixed annuities” or “index annuities,” it began selling “lifetime income.”

That phrase is politically brilliant. Nobody wants to argue against retirees having dependable income. But behind the softer language sits the same insurance-driven business model that has long dominated retail annuity sales: opaque pricing, embedded spreads, insurer credit risk, weak benchmarking, and conflicts of interest between insurers, consultants, recordkeepers, and product manufacturers.

The Morningstar report “Evaluating Target-Date Strategies With Annuities” unintentionally exposes how rapidly this transformation is occurring.

Morningstar reports that assets in target-date strategies with annuities reached $44 billion by March 2026, while broader multi-asset portfolios with embedded annuities surpassed $115 billion. The report presents this as innovation. In reality, it represents the institutionalization of insurance products inside default retirement structures where most participants will never understand the underlying risks.

The retirement industry understands something very important: once insurance products get into the Qualified Default Investment Alternative (QDIA), they become extraordinarily sticky. Participants rarely move money out of default target-date funds. That makes target-date funds the perfect Trojan horse for embedding annuity structures into retirement plans.

The insurance industry could never successfully convince millions of participants to voluntarily buy retail fixed annuities one by one inside their 401(k). But it may not need to. If insurers can get annuity components embedded inside target-date funds, particularly inside weakly state regulated Collective Investment Trusts (CITs), the battle is largely won.

The industry’s public narrative focuses heavily on “lifetime income” target-date products. But when you examine actual plan assets over $100 million, a very different picture emerges. The overwhelming majority of annuity balances inside plans are still traditional fixed annuities and general account products. In my review of large plans, roughly 95% of annuity-related assets remain concentrated in fixed annuities, with variable annuities, index annuities, separate account annuities, and newer lifetime income structures making up only a small fraction of balances.

That distinction matters.

The industry uses lifetime income products as the politically acceptable entry point because they sound safer, more participant-friendly, and more fiduciary-oriented. But once fiduciaries and regulators normalize insurance structures inside target-date funds, the door opens for broader use of insurance products across the entire defined contribution system.

Morningstar itself acknowledges many of the underlying problems, even while promoting the category.

The report concedes that evaluating these products requires analyzing insurer financial strength, liquidity constraints, opaque payout structures, valuation complications, and participant confusion. It openly admits that participants may not understand the products and that complexity creates a major fiduciary challenge.

The report also admits that many products have no transparent fee disclosure because costs are embedded inside payout structures rather than explicit expense ratios. This is one of the oldest tricks in the annuity industry: hide compensation and spreads inside insurance pricing rather than clear investment management fees.

Even more troubling is the paper’s discussion of valuation.

Morningstar states that these products generally avoid the valuation concerns associated with private markets because they still provide daily NAV pricing. But this completely misses the real issue. Daily NAV pricing does not eliminate valuation risk when the underlying guarantees, insurer obligations, private credit exposures, and embedded spreads are themselves difficult to independently value.

This is precisely why SEC mutual fund structures historically limited these kinds of insurance and alternative structures. Traditional SEC frameworks evolved over decades to address problems involving liquidity, leverage, valuation, affiliated transactions, and hidden compensation.

Weakly state regulated CIT structures increasingly bypass those protections.

That is why the target-date fund wrapper matters so much. Once annuity structures move into CITs rather than SEC mutual funds, insurers and asset managers gain significantly more flexibility around valuation methods, disclosure standards, and underlying holdings. The result is a retirement system moving away from transparent publicly traded securities and toward opaque insurance-based structures that participants cannot realistically monitor.

Morningstar’s paper also highlights another critical issue: conflicts of interest.

The report repeatedly suggests that plan sponsors may need to rely on the same asset managers selling these products to evaluate whether the pricing and guarantees are reasonable. That is not independent fiduciary analysis. That is product manufacturers grading their own homework.

This is especially dangerous because many of the largest firms promoting these structures simultaneously operate across multiple layers of the ecosystem: asset management, insurance manufacturing, consulting relationships, recordkeeping partnerships, CIT administration, managed accounts, and annuity distribution.

The industry calls this “innovation.” In practice, it increasingly resembles vertical integration around opaque retirement products.

The deeper issue is philosophical.

For decades, the retirement system largely operated through transparent securities markets governed by SEC rules emphasizing disclosure, comparability, liquidity, and independent valuation. The new retirement model increasingly shifts toward insurance-based promises backed by insurer balance sheets, private credit portfolios, structured products, and actuarial assumptions that ordinary participants cannot evaluate.

The retirement industry is not merely adding “income solutions.” It is changing the architecture of the 401(k) system itself.

And the public should understand where this road leads.

History shows that whenever financial firms are permitted to combine opaque accounting, hidden spreads, illiquid assets, and weak oversight, abuse eventually follows. We saw it in Executive Life. We saw it in AIG. We saw it in structured products before 2008. We are now watching similar structures migrate into retirement plans under the more politically acceptable language of “lifetime income.”

Lifetime income may sound comforting.

But fiduciaries should ask a more important question:

What exactly is sitting underneath the guarantee?

Addendum: Prohibited Transaction Risk, Litigation Exposure, and the Dangerous Mixing of Accounting Standards

The greatest risk in the current “lifetime income” movement may not be the annuity itself. The greater danger is the gradual collapse of consistent accounting and fiduciary standards inside the 401(k) system.

For decades, SEC mutual fund rules imposed relatively consistent standards around valuation, liquidity, diversification, leverage, affiliated transactions, fee disclosure, and performance reporting. These rules were not accidental. They evolved through repeated financial scandals involving opaque insurance products, hidden leverage, structured products, and conflicts of interest.

Today, the retirement industry increasingly seeks to bypass those standards through Collective Investment Trusts (CITs), insurance separate accounts, general account products, private credit structures, and embedded annuity arrangements. The result is a growing mismatch between the appearance of a traditional diversified retirement investment and the underlying economic reality.

This creates profound prohibited transaction and fiduciary concerns.

ERISA prohibited transaction rules exist because Congress recognized that financial firms operating inside retirement plans possess enormous incentives to steer participants into proprietary or affiliated products generating hidden compensation streams. When insurers, consultants, recordkeepers, target-date managers, and affiliated asset managers all participate economically from the same structure, the distinction between independent fiduciary advice and product distribution begins to disappear.

The Morningstar report repeatedly frames these products as ordinary target-date investments with an added insurance feature. But economically, many of these arrangements operate far closer to vertically integrated insurance distribution systems than traditional investment funds.

That distinction matters legally.

Once a retirement plan embeds insurer-backed guarantees inside a target-date structure, fiduciaries may inherit a wide range of risks not present in traditional public-market target-date funds:

• insurer insolvency risk
• general account credit risk
• liquidity restrictions
• valuation uncertainty
• opaque embedded spreads
• affiliated compensation structures
• private credit exposure
• actuarial pricing assumptions
• conflicts between participant interests and insurer profitability

These risks become even more serious when plans mix accounting regimes and regulatory standards inside a single retirement product.

A traditional SEC mutual fund historically could not easily hold many of the opaque insurance or alternative structures now appearing inside CIT-based target-date products. That was not regulatory oversight—it was often intentional regulatory restraint. SEC accounting frameworks generally demand clearer pricing, liquidity, diversification, and disclosure standards than weakly regulated state insurance structures or bank-trust CIT frameworks.

The modern retirement industry increasingly engages in what can fairly be called “accounting arbitrage.”

Private equity, private credit, insurance guarantees, stable-value contracts, and annuity structures are inserted into retirement vehicles operating under weaker disclosure and valuation standards while still being marketed to participants as if they were ordinary diversified investments comparable to SEC mutual funds.

This creates enormous litigation risk.

Plaintiffs’ firms increasingly understand that many of these structures may expose fiduciaries to prohibited transaction claims under ERISA Sections 406(a) and 406(b), particularly after Cunningham v. Cornell clarified that prohibited transaction claims should not be prematurely dismissed merely because a transaction appears common within the industry.

The legal problem for fiduciaries is straightforward:

If a plan fiduciary selects a product where insurers, consultants, recordkeepers, or affiliated managers receive indirect compensation streams, embedded spreads, proprietary distribution advantages, or affiliated revenue arrangements, courts may increasingly ask whether the fiduciary truly acted solely in participants’ interests or instead facilitated a conflicted transaction benefiting parties in interest.

The litigation danger is amplified because many of these products are extremely difficult to benchmark independently.

Morningstar itself acknowledges that meaningful benchmarking becomes difficult after annuitization and that sponsors may need to rely heavily on provider-generated assumptions and scenario analysis. That is precisely where fiduciary danger increases. When a product cannot be independently benchmarked using transparent market comparisons, proving prudence becomes substantially harder.

This is especially true for products with:

• implicit rather than explicit fees
• insurer-controlled payout assumptions
• embedded private credit exposure
• self-rated or weakly rated assets
• actuarial assumptions participants cannot evaluate
• illiquid structures lacking transparent market pricing

The retirement industry presents these developments as “innovation.” But many resemble the same structural problems that repeatedly appeared before prior financial crises: opaque valuation, hidden compensation, regulatory fragmentation, and products that become impossible for ordinary investors to understand.

The danger is not merely theoretical.

History shows that insurance-based structures can fail slowly and quietly before collapsing suddenly. Executive Life, AIG, structured products before 2008, and multiple failed annuity issuers all demonstrated how quickly supposedly stable guarantees can deteriorate when opaque assets, leverage, and accounting flexibility combine.

The irony is that many of these risks are now entering retirement plans under the most trusted label in modern investing: the target-date fund.

Fiduciaries should remember a simple principle:

If an investment structure could not comfortably survive traditional SEC mutual fund accounting and disclosure standards, there should be an extremely strong presumption against placing it inside a participant-directed retirement plan through weaker regulatory wrappers.

Columbia’s Private Credit Ratings Paper May Be the Most Important Annuity Risk Paper of 2026

A new Columbia Business School paper, Rating Without Market Discipline, may become one of the most important academic papers in the debate over private credit, insurance company solvency, fixed annuities, and pension risk transfer annuities.

The paper’s core finding is devastatingly simple: private ratings appear to understate credit risk. That matters because life insurers increasingly hold opaque private credit, structured credit, CLOs, bank loans, and privately placed securities on their balance sheets. These assets are often treated as high-quality investment-grade assets for regulatory capital purposes. But Columbia finds that privately rated insurer bonds with the same rating as publicly rated bonds are roughly twice as likely to suffer impairments — and are downgraded less often, not more.

That is the worst possible combination.

It means the rating is not merely optimistic. It is sticky. It fails to move when the credit is deteriorating. In plain English, the insurer gets the benefit of a high rating for capital purposes while the real economic risk is higher than the rating suggests.

This finding goes directly to the heart of the private credit debate. The private credit industry has repeatedly claimed that its loans and structured assets are safe, senior, secured, carefully underwritten, and conservatively valued. But the Columbia paper shows that when private credit-type instruments move into insurance company balance sheets and are rated through private-letter channels, the ratings may not carry the same information as public ratings. The “AA” or “A” label may not mean what ordinary investors, fiduciaries, or retirees think it means.

That is a market-shaking finding.

It is especially important because the paper focuses on life insurers — the same institutions now selling fixed annuities, general account stable value products, registered index-linked annuities, group annuity contracts, and pension risk transfer annuities. These products are often marketed as safe because they are backed by insurance company balance sheets. But if the assets inside those balance sheets are increasingly private, opaque, self-priced, privately rated, and potentially overrated, then the safety claim becomes much weaker.

This also strengthens the argument made in the Phoenix/LPL litigation context. The risk in annuity products is not only whether the underlying investments “go to zero.” The risk is that policyholders and retirement plan participants become trapped inside an insurer balance sheet when the insurer weakens, enters rehabilitation, or loses liquidity. Participants may lose the ability to surrender, transfer, exchange, or reposition assets even before a traditional “principal loss” appears.

The Columbia paper makes that risk easier to prove.

For years, insurers have pointed to ratings and regulatory capital as proof that general account annuities and PRT annuities are safe. But Columbia shows that the ratings themselves may be part of the problem. If a large portion of the insurer’s supposedly high-grade portfolio depends on private ratings without market discipline, then fiduciaries cannot simply rely on the insurer’s headline rating, statutory capital ratio, or NAIC treatment.

The most important fiduciary takeaway is this:

A fixed annuity is not just a conservative bond fund. A PRT annuity is not just a pension check with an insurance wrapper. Both are concentrated credit exposures to an insurance company whose balance sheet may contain hard-to-value private credit assets that are rated through channels lacking public market discipline.

This is particularly dangerous for 401(k) and pension fiduciaries because participants do not negotiate the insurer’s investment policy, cannot inspect private ratings, cannot value opaque private credit holdings, and usually do not receive meaningful downgrade escape rights. They are told the product is safe because it is issued by an insurance company. Columbia shows why that assumption is no longer good enough.

The paper also helps explain why private equity-owned insurers deserve special scrutiny. Columbia finds private ratings are concentrated among large insurers, high-yield tilted insurers, and private equity-owned insurers. That fits the broader concern that private equity has turned insurance balance sheets into financing engines for private credit. The insurer collects retirement money. The affiliated or related asset manager originates or packages private credit. Private ratings help lower capital charges. The policyholder or retiree bears the hidden credit and liquidity risk.

That is not ordinary insurance regulation. That is regulatory arbitrage.

The paper is also important for pension risk transfers. In a PRT transaction, a plan sponsor moves pension obligations from an ERISA-protected pension plan to an insurer. The transaction is sold as “de-risking.” But if the insurer’s balance sheet is increasingly supported by privately rated credit that is less safe than its rating indicates, the transaction may simply replace transparent pension risk with opaque insurer credit risk.

This should change the fiduciary due diligence standard. Fiduciaries evaluating fixed annuities, general account stable value contracts, or PRT annuities should ask:

Are the insurer’s “AA” assets really AA?

How much of the insurer’s bond portfolio relies on private-letter ratings?

How much is private credit, CLOs, structured credit, bank loans, or affiliate-originated assets?

Who rated those assets?

Were they publicly rated or privately rated?

Are the assets priced by observable market inputs or by models, brokers, affiliates, or the insurer itself?

What happens if the insurer is downgraded?

Do participants have real liquidity rights, or are they trapped?

The Columbia paper provides academic support for a commonsense conclusion: private credit cannot be treated as safe simply because an insurer, private rating agency, or regulator assigns it a high-grade label. Ratings without market discipline are not the same as ratings tested by public markets.

That finding is enormously important for ERISA litigation, annuity fiduciary reviews, PRT due diligence, and the broader debate over private credit in retirement plans.

The insurance industry has long argued that fixed annuities and PRT annuities are safe because insurers are highly regulated and conservatively capitalized. Columbia’s paper shows the flaw in that defense. Regulation may require a rating, but it cannot create the market discipline that makes the rating reliable.

That is the bridge between private credit and annuity risk.

If the assets backing annuities are overrated, opaque, illiquid, and slow to be downgraded, then the annuity itself is riskier than advertised. The danger is not just volatility. The danger is hidden credit deterioration that remains invisible until policyholders discover they cannot get their money out.

Phoenix showed what happens when annuity owners lose control.

Columbia shows why the balance sheets backing modern annuities may be far riskier than the ratings suggest.

Li, Xuelin and Oh, Sangmin and Ricciardi, Giacomo, Rating Without Market Discipline (May 31, 2026). Columbia Business School Research Paper, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=6859158

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/paid-insurance-company-99000-generate-retirement-income-life-collapsed-rcna331934

The SEC Quietly Killed Stable Value Mutual Funds in 2004 — And That Tells You Everything About Private Equity, Fixed Annuities, and Prohibited Transactions in 401(k)s

Today, the retirement industry insists that if a product is somehow legal under lax state insurance rules or state banking laws and has a vague, weak ERISA exemption, then it somehow belongs inside a 401(k) plan. That logic is backwards.

A much better test is this: Could the product survive inside a fully transparent, federally regulated, SEC-registered mutual fund subject to daily fair-value accounting?  If the answer is no, fiduciaries should immediately ask why.

That question is becoming increasingly important as Wall Street attempts to push private equity, private credit, insurance annuities, and other opaque contract-based products into retirement plans through CITs, insurance wrappers, and other structures exempt from the accounting standards applied to SEC mutual funds.

Ironically, the best historical example may be stable value itself.

The Forgotten Stable Value Mutual Funds

Most younger fiduciaries do not realize that from roughly 1997 to 2004, several firms attempted to operate synthetic stable value products inside SEC-registered mutual funds.   They never even tried with fixed annuities.  Deutsche/Scudder, Morley, PBHG, Pilgrim Baxter, Dwight and others experimented with structures that used wrap contracts and book-value accounting techniques inside registered investment companies.  It was basically 95% SEC short bond fund and 5% insurance wrapper.  I remember because I was the wrapper.

The experiment quietly failed. Not because participants lost money. Not because the underlying bond portfolios collapsed.

But because the SEC accounting framework could not comfortably accommodate book-value insurance accounting inside a daily NAV mutual fund structure.

One of the most important historical documents is a 2004 SEC filing from Scudder/Deutsche involving the Scudder PreservationPlus Income Fund.

The filing states:

“The staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission has inquired as to the valuation methodology for Wrapper Agreements utilized by ‘stable value’ mutual funds, including this Fund.”

That sentence is extraordinary.

The SEC staff was directly questioning the accounting treatment of wrapper agreements used by stable value mutual funds.  The filing further explained that if the SEC required the wrappers to be valued differently, the fund would no longer be able to maintain a stable NAV.

Then came the real admission.  Effective November 17, 2004:

“the fund no longer seeks to maintain a stable net asset value per share”

And “terminated all of its wrapper agreements … and effectively became a short-term bond fund.”  The stable value mutual fund structure effectively disappeared shortly thereafter.

The Real Problem Was Accounting

This is one of the most misunderstood episodes in retirement-plan history.

The issue was not necessarily that the underlying bonds were impaired. In many cases, market-to-book values were manageable or even positive. Providers could quietly unwind the wraps and transition the products into short-duration bond funds without creating participant panic.

The problem was structural.

Stable value depended on:

  • book-value accounting,
  • contract-value reporting,
  • insurance-style smoothing,
  • and wrapper agreements whose economics did not fit naturally inside a mutual fund built around daily fair-value NAV accounting.

That distinction matters enormously.

The Investment Company Act of 1940 is fundamentally a transparency regime. Mutual funds generally operate under:

  • daily liquidity,
  • observable valuation,
  • mark-to-market discipline,
  • independent custody,
  • and fair-value accounting.

Stable value strained those rules.

And if a synthetic stable value had trouble surviving inside a registered mutual fund structure, then general account fixed annuities are dramatically worse.

Synthetic Stable Value Was the Furthest the SEC Would Go

The industry now portrays synthetic stable value as conservative and traditional.

Historically, however, synthetic stable value represented the outer boundary of what regulators were willing to tolerate inside transparent investment structures.

Synthetic stable value at least had:

  • externally plan owned bond portfolios,
  • independent trusts,
  • observable fixed-income assets,
  • and some degree of market transparency.

General account annuities eliminate even those protections.

Under a traditional general account GIC:

  • the insurer owns the assets,
  • the insurer controls valuation,
  • the insurer controls liquidity,
  • participants become exposed to insurer solvency,
  • spreads are opaque,
  • private assets may be self-rated,
  • and fiduciaries cannot independently observe underlying economics.

From an accounting perspective, general account annuities are far further removed from SEC mutual fund standards than synthetic stable value ever was.

The Same Accounting Arbitrage Is Happening Again

The stable value mutual fund story is not ancient history.

It is the blueprint for what is happening today with:

  • private equity,
  • private credit,
  • insurance annuities,
  • interval funds,
  • target-date CITs,
  • and insurance-based retirement products.

Products that struggle under SEC accounting standards increasingly migrate into structures like State Regulated Insurance and State Banking-regulated CITs where:

  • fair-value discipline weakens,
  • disclosures decline,
  • liquidity assumptions soften,
  • Benchmarking becomes manipulable,
  • and fiduciary oversight becomes more difficult.

The common denominator is not diversification.

It is accounting arbitrage.

Wall Street increasingly seeks products that cannot survive under ordinary mutual fund transparency rules because opaque accounting produces:

  • higher fees,
  • smoother reported returns,
  • hidden leverage,
  • spread extraction,
  • and greater control over valuation.

That is not modernization.

It is a regression.

A Useful Fiduciary Test

The retirement industry spends enormous energy debating whether products technically qualify for ERISA exemptions.

Fiduciaries should ask a more important question:

Would this product survive inside a fully transparent SEC mutual fund subject to daily fair-value accounting and independent valuation standards?

If the answer is no, that is not automatically proof of a prohibited transaction.

But it is a major warning sign.

The stable value mutual fund collapse of 2004 suggests regulators themselves became uncomfortable with stretching SEC accounting rules even for synthetic stable value products that were far more transparent than modern general account annuities, private credit vehicles, and private equity structures now being pushed into 401(k) plans.

The further a product must migrate away from SEC accounting standards and toward opaque contractual accounting systems, the more likely it is that the product’s economics depend on conflicts of interest, hidden spreads, valuation discretion, or fiduciary opacity.

That is exactly the environment ERISA’s prohibited transaction rules were designed to prevent.

SEC 2004 filing on Scudder/Deutsche https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/906619/000008805304001111/

 https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/04/03/dol-401k-fiduciary-rule-enables-accounting-fraud/

https://commonsense401kproject.com/2025/08/12/4-sets-of-books-how-trumps-401k-push-opens-the-door-to-accounting-chaos/ and my newest

New Phoenix/LPL Litigation Strengthens the Case Against Fixed Annuities in 401(k) Plans

ERISA Private Equity Fiduciary Due Diligence Checklist

https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/06/07/the-private-equity-business-model-depends-on-secrecy-fake-benchmarks-and-fiduciary-illusions/

Target Date Fund Fiduciary Due Diligence Guardrail Checklist

ERISA Fixed Annuity Due Diligence Checklist

New Phoenix/LPL Litigation Strengthens the Case Against Fixed Annuities in 401(k) Plans

The collapse of PHL Variable Insurance Company and the new litigation against LPL Financial provide one of the clearest modern examples of why insurer-issued annuity products represent a growing and poorly understood danger inside retirement plans.

According to the newly filed complaint, the alleged harm was not that the underlying separate account investments suddenly disappeared. Rather, policyholders allegedly lost the ability to access, surrender, exchange, or reposition their retirement assets once Phoenix entered rehabilitation.

As attorney Adam Gana explained:

“The issue is not whether the underlying separate account investments disappeared. According to the complaint, the harm stems from policyholders losing the ability to access, surrender, exchange, or otherwise reposition their assets once PHL entered rehabilitation.”

That distinction is critically important for ERISA litigation involving fixed annuities and insurer general account and separate account products in 401(k) and 403(b) plans. It also covers lifetime income annuities and Pension Risk Transfer (PRT) annuities in ERISA Defined Benefit Plans.

For years, insurers and some plan consultants have marketed general account fixed annuities as “stable value” or “capital preservation” investments. But the Phoenix collapse again demonstrates that policyholders are not simply investing in a conservative bond portfolio. They are becoming unsecured creditors of a leveraged insurance company whose liabilities can become frozen during periods of financial distress.

This is precisely the type of liquidity and counterparty risk that synthetic stable value structures were designed to reduce.

Unlike insurer general account annuities, diversified synthetic stable value structures generally separate the fixed income portfolio from the wrap provider’s balance sheet. If one wrap provider weakens or fails, plans can often replace the wrap provider while maintaining participant ownership of the underlying assets.

In contrast, insurer general account annuities typically trap participants inside the insurer’s balance sheet itself. Once the insurer enters rehabilitation or experiences severe financial stress, participants can lose practical access to their money even if the underlying investments continue to exist.

The Phoenix litigation also highlights a major structural problem with insurer-issued fixed annuities in 401(k) plans: most contain no meaningful downgrade protection clauses.

In institutional synthetic stable value contracts, downgrades are accommodated with step-up clauses. A typical synthetic stable value CIT like the Vanguard RST may have 6 diversified wrappers. If the credit quality of one wrap provider deteriorates below specified levels, there are contractural provisions that the other 5 wrappers step up and take the coverage allocation of the downgraded wrapper. Vanguard RST successfully did this with AIG in 2007 before the bailout was certain, and would have had little effect even if the government had let AIG collapse.

But many insurer-issued fixed annuities in 401(k) plans contain no comparable participant protections. Plans remain trapped even after significant credit deterioration in what I have called a death spiral.

The complaint against LPL alleges that Phoenix annuities were no longer recommended after ratings downgrades and other warning signs emerged following the 2008 financial crisis, yet existing policyholders allegedly were not warned about the insurer’s deteriorating financial condition.

That allegation directly parallels one of the central fiduciary concerns now emerging in ERISA prohibited transaction litigation involving fixed annuities:

If insurers, consultants, or recordkeepers understood the growing credit risks associated with insurer balance sheets, why were retirement plan participants not given meaningful liquidity protections or downgrade escape rights?

The issue becomes even more troubling in employer retirement plans because participants often have no practical ability to negotiate terms, review insurer solvency risk, or monitor complex insurance company balance sheets.

In many 401(k) plans, the insurer is simultaneously:

  • the product manufacturer,
  • the credit counterparty,
  • the spread-profit recipient,
  • and frequently a party in interest to the plan.

That structure creates precisely the kind of conflicted transaction ERISA’s prohibited transaction rules were designed to scrutinize.

The Department of Labor’s historical exemptions for insurance company general account products were largely built around assumptions that insurers were highly regulated, conservatively capitalized, and operationally stable. But the modern insurance industry increasingly relies on:

  • private credit,
  • structured finance,
  • derivatives,
  • affiliated asset managers,
  • offshore reinsurance,
  • and opaque valuation practices.

The Phoenix collapse demonstrates that these are not hypothetical concerns.

Even when “market losses” do not immediately appear in participant statements, policyholders can still suffer catastrophic harm through the loss of liquidity, surrender rights, transfer rights, and control over retirement assets.

That reality fundamentally weakens the common defense argument that insurer-issued annuities are “safe because participants never lost principal.”

Loss of liquidity itself can constitute enormous economic harm.

For ERISA fiduciaries, the key question is no longer simply whether an insurer can maintain book-value accounting during normal conditions. The question is whether participants are being exposed to uncompensated insurer-credit and liquidity risks without adequate contractual protections.

The Phoenix litigation may become one of the strongest modern real-world examples supporting the argument that insurer general account annuities are fundamentally different from diversified stable value structures — and that many plans failed to adequately evaluate those differences.

It also strengthens the broader argument that insurer-issued fixed annuities in 401(k) plans deserve heightened scrutiny under ERISA’s prohibited transaction framework, particularly where:

  • no downgrade clauses exist,
  • no independent market valuation exists,
  • participants cannot freely exit,
  • insurers profit from spread capture,
  • and affiliated parties control multiple sides of the transaction.

For years, the insurance industry has argued that these products are safer because they avoid mark-to-market volatility.

Phoenix demonstrates the opposite reality:

Sometimes the greatest risk is not volatility.
It is discovering that your retirement assets are locked inside a failing insurer when you need them most.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/paid-insurance-company-99000-generate-retirement-income-life-collapsed-rcna331934

https://www.fa-mag.com/news/lpl-sued-for-allegedly-failing-to-warn-clients-about-troubled-annuity-provider-87299.html

ERISA Private Equity Fiduciary Due Diligence Checklist

A Common Sense Framework for 401(k), 403(b), CIT, and Target-Date Fund Fiduciaries

Introduction

Private equity and other private-market investments are increasingly being pushed into participant-directed retirement plans through target-date funds, CITs, interval funds, evergreen vehicles, and semi-liquid wrappers. Fiduciaries are often told these products provide “diversification,” “institutional access,” and “enhanced returns.”

However, private equity products differ fundamentally from traditional mutual funds and public securities. They involve limited transparency, subjective valuation, conditional liquidity, complex fee structures, leverage, and performance reporting methodologies that are often not comparable to public-market investments.

Oxford Professor Ludovic Phalippou recently warned the Department of Labor that “asset neutrality should not mean metric neutrality, disclosure neutrality, or governance neutrality.”https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6847259

This checklist is designed to help ERISA fiduciaries identify hidden risks, conflicts, prohibited transaction concerns, and misleading performance claims before adding private-market exposure to participant-directed retirement plans.


I. Performance Measurement & Benchmarking

□ 1. Avoid reliance on IRR as the primary performance metric

Internal Rate of Return (“IRR”) is not equivalent to mutual fund or index returns and does not measure investor wealth compounding. IRR is heavily influenced by cash-flow timing, subscription lines, early exits, dividend recapitalizations, and leverage.

Professor Phalippou notes that private equity firms such as KKR and Apollo have reported remarkably stable since-inception IRRs for decades, despite radically different market conditions, demonstrating how IRR can become mathematically “sticky” rather than economically meaningful.

Fiduciary Questions

  • Is IRR being compared directly to public market annualized returns?
  • Is IRR being used to justify superiority over index funds?
  • Are subscription credit lines artificially inflating IRR?
  • Is the fiduciary receiving actual cash-flow-based investor outcome analysis?

□ 2. Require Public Market Equivalent (PME) analysis

Fiduciaries should require cash-flow-based PME benchmarking rather than marketing-based IRR comparisons.

PME analysis should:

  • Be specified ex ante
  • Match geography, leverage, sector, currency, and risk
  • Be net of all fees and expenses
  • Compare against realistic investable alternatives

Fiduciary Questions

  • Was the benchmark selected before evaluating performance?
  • Is the benchmark investable and liquid?
  • Does the benchmark reflect similar leverage and sector exposure?
  • Is the comparison apples-to-apples?

□ 3. Compare the entire target-date product—not merely the private sleeve

Private equity allocations are frequently embedded inside target-date funds, collective investment trusts, or multi-layered structures.

The relevant fiduciary question is not:

“Did the private sleeve outperform?”

The relevant question is:

“Did the total participant product improve expected participant outcomes after all fees, liquidity limits, valuation risk, leverage, and complexity?”

Fiduciary Questions

  • Would a simple public-market implementation likely achieve similar outcomes?
  • Is the private sleeve adding measurable participant value after all costs?
  • Is volatility being artificially suppressed through stale or subjective valuations?

II. Fee Transparency & Hidden Compensation

□ 4. Require consolidated all-in fee disclosure

Private equity fees frequently extend far beyond “2 and 20.”

Potential hidden costs include:

  • Portfolio-company monitoring fees
  • Transaction fees
  • Financing fees
  • Broken-deal expenses
  • Advisory fees
  • Platform fees
  • Subscription-line costs
  • Distribution compensation
  • Affiliate payments
  • Feeder fund expenses
  • Consulting and placement fees

Professor Phalippou emphasizes that “knowing fees are 2%-20%-8% does not convey the actual economic burden.”

Fiduciary Questions

  • What percentage of gross investment gain is ultimately retained by participants?
  • Are affiliate payments fully disclosed?
  • Are portfolio-company fees rebated or retained?
  • Is compensation flowing to parties in interest?

□ 5. Examine revenue-sharing and platform conflicts

Private-market products often generate indirect compensation to:

  • Recordkeepers
  • Consultants
  • OCIO providers
  • Target-date managers
  • Placement agents
  • Wealth platforms
  • CIT trustees

Fiduciary Questions

  • Does any service provider receive compensation tied to private-market allocations?
  • Are fiduciaries receiving fully transparent compensation reports?
  • Are private-market products steering participants toward higher-fee structures?

III. Valuation, NAV, and Fair Pricing

□ 6. Scrutinize NAV-based pricing mechanisms

Many semi-liquid and evergreen structures use Net Asset Value (“NAV”) as:

  • Subscription pricing
  • Redemption pricing
  • Fee calculation basis
  • Performance reporting basis

This creates substantial conflicts when valuations are subjective.

Professor Phalippou notes that investors may subscribe or redeem at prices materially disconnected from actual market-clearing values.

Fiduciary Questions

  • Are secondary market discounts materially below stated NAV?
  • Who determines the NAV?
  • Can the manager influence valuation inputs?
  • Are stale marks suppressing volatility?

□ 7. Evaluate continuation funds and affiliated transactions

Continuation vehicles, GP-led secondaries, and cross-fund sales create inherent conflicts where the manager may influence both price and process.

Fiduciary Questions

  • Are fairness opinions truly independent?
  • Does the manager control both sides of the transaction?
  • Are participants effectively buying marked-up assets from affiliated entities?

IV. Liquidity & Stress Testing

□ 8. Conduct stress-based liquidity analysis

Quarterly liquidity windows, gates, redemption caps, and side pockets may function normally during stable markets but fail during stressed conditions.

Fiduciary Questions

  • What occurs during mass participant withdrawals?
  • What happens if public markets decline sharply?
  • How would the product behave during a plan termination or sponsor bankruptcy?
  • Could remaining participants become trapped in illiquid assets?

□ 9. Analyze first-mover advantage risk

Semi-liquid structures may reward early redeemers while leaving remaining participants with concentrated illiquid exposure.

Fiduciary Questions

  • Are liquid assets sold first during redemption stress?
  • Does the portfolio become progressively riskier after withdrawals?
  • Could later participants bear disproportionate valuation losses?

V. Complexity & Governance Risk

□ 10. Treat complexity itself as a fiduciary risk factor

Complexity is not merely operational—it can conceal:

  • Hidden fees
  • Affiliate conflicts
  • Leverage
  • Valuation manipulation
  • Benchmark gaming
  • Illiquidity
  • Risk concentration

Fiduciary Questions

  • Can participants reasonably understand the structure?
  • Can fiduciaries independently evaluate the underlying holdings?
  • Does complexity benefit participants—or intermediaries?

□ 11. Investigate consultant and adviser conflicts

Professor Phalippou specifically warns that adviser reliance should not substitute for fiduciary judgment.

Many consultants, OCIO providers, and recordkeepers have economic incentives aligned with expanding private-market usage.   Many consultants are owned by Private Equity https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/05/09/consultants-conflicts-and-the-collapse-of-public-pension-performance/

Fiduciary Questions

  • Does the consultant receive compensation from private-market sponsors?
  • Does the adviser manage affiliated CITs or private products?
  • Are fiduciaries independently verifying consultant recommendations?

VI. Prohibited Transaction & ERISA Concerns

□ 12. Investigate party-in-interest relationships

Private-market structures frequently involve overlapping financial relationships among:

  • Recordkeepers
  • Consultants
  • CIT trustees
  • Insurance companies
  • OCIO providers
  • Placement agents
  • Asset managers

Fiduciary Questions

  • Are fiduciaries causing plans to transact with parties in interest?
  • Are affiliates receiving indirect compensation?
  • Could the structure implicate ERISA §§406(a) or 406(b)?

□ 13. Evaluate whether “availability” is being sold rather than prudence

Higher-fee products are often justified based on “access” or “institutional availability,” even where comparable public-market exposure exists at dramatically lower cost and greater transparency.

Fiduciary Questions

  • Is private-market exposure truly necessary?
  • Would public-market alternatives likely provide similar participant outcomes?
  • Is illiquidity being confused with sophistication?

VII. Common Sense Participant Protection Questions

Before adding private equity exposure, fiduciaries should ask:

  • Would I fully explain this structure to participants in plain English?
  • Could participants independently verify valuation and performance claims?
  • Could participants easily understand total fees?
  • Would the product remain attractive if fully transparent?
  • Is the structure designed primarily for participant benefit—or intermediary profit extraction?

Conclusion

Private equity is not automatically prudent or imprudent under ERISA. But private-market products require significantly greater scrutiny because they involve:

  • subjective valuation,
  • conditional liquidity,
  • opaque fee structures,
  • benchmark manipulation risk,
  • leverage,
  • and substantial conflicts of interest.

As Professor Ludovic Phalippou recently warned the Department of Labor, fiduciaries must distinguish “asset neutrality” from “metric neutrality, disclosure neutrality, and governance neutrality.”

ERISA fiduciaries should not treat private-market products as ordinary mutual funds merely because they are packaged inside a target-date fund, CIT, or retirement wrapper.

Retirement savers deserve transparent pricing, meaningful benchmarking, stress-tested liquidity, fair valuation practices, and fully disclosed conflicts before their retirement savings are exposed to private-market risk.

The Private Equity Business Model Depends on Secrecy, Fake Benchmarks, and Fiduciary Illusions

The private equity industry does not merely prefer secrecy.
It requires secrecy.

Without opaque valuations, manipulated benchmarks, hidden fees, and misleading performance metrics, the industry’s excessive fee structure could not survive in a competitive marketplace.

That is the uncomfortable truth at the center of the Department of Labor’s proposal to open 401(k) plans to private equity products. And after reviewing more than 40,000 public comments submitted to the DOL, none stands out more than the analysis submitted by Professor Ludovic Phalippou of Oxford University — arguably the world’s leading academic expert on private equity performance and valuation.

The industry’s defenders talk endlessly about “innovation,” “access,” and “democratization.”
Ludo talks about math.

And the math is devastating.  https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6847259

As Phalippou explains in his formal DOL submission, the private equity industry’s favorite performance metric — Internal Rate of Return (IRR) — is not actually a measure of investor wealth compounding at all. It is a discount-rate formula that can be heavily manipulated through timing, subscription lines, dividend recaps, and cash-flow engineering.

In plain English: private equity markets returns in a way that would never be tolerated in public mutual funds.

Phalippou demolishes the fantasy using the industry’s own numbers.

KKR has reported roughly 26% since-inception IRRs for almost twenty years straight. Apollo has reported approximately 39% since-inception private equity IRRs for decades. If those numbers reflected actual investor wealth compounding, Apollo’s original funds would theoretically be worth sums approaching the GDP of the United States.

That is not investing.
That is marketing arithmetic.

Phalippou’s central point is simple but devastating:

“Asset neutrality should not mean metric neutrality, disclosure neutrality, or governance neutrality.”

The private equity industry survives because it is allowed to compare apples to oranges while charging exponentially higher fees than transparent public markets.

And that deception is spreading.

The Entire Business Model Depends on Preventing Transparency

If private equity managers were forced to:

  • disclose all fees like SEC mutual funds,
  • use public-market-equivalent benchmarks,
  • fully report portfolio-company fees,
  • mark assets honestly,
  • disclose secondary-sale discounts,
  • reveal side letters,
  • and compare performance against low-cost index funds,

the economics of the industry would collapse.

That is why transparency itself has become the industry’s existential threat.

The recently released independent forensic CalPERS investigation highlights exactly how this system operates inside the nation’s largest public pension.

The report documents:

  • chronic underperformance,
  • hidden and understated investment costs,
  • fake “custom” benchmarks,
  • consultant conflicts,
  • opaque valuations,
  • zombie private-equity funds,
  • and aggressive resistance to transparency.

The report’s findings are extraordinary because CalPERS is not some small fringe pension.

CalPERS is the herd leader.  https://www.rpea.com/view/download.php/news/calpers-investigation-report

When CalPERS normalizes secrecy, benchmark manipulation, and opaque alternatives, other pensions follow.

As the report explains:

“Investors globally are harmed when the pension leader misleads.”

Fake Benchmarks Create Artificial Alpha

One of the most important findings in the CalPERS investigation is that private equity underperformance is hidden through benchmark engineering.

CalPERS uses non-investable “custom benchmarks” like:

  • CPI + 400 basis points,
  • FTSE All-World + 150 basis points,
  • or internally constructed composite benchmarks.

These are not real portfolios that investors can buy.

They are fictional scoreboards designed to be beaten.

The report correctly calls this “Artificial Alpha.”

Richard Ennis famously described the process as “chasing slow rabbits.”

The game works like this:

  1. Create a benchmark nobody can actually invest in.
  2. Compare private assets to that benchmark.
  3. Ignore hidden leverage, stale valuations, and illiquidity.
  4. Claim outperformance.
  5. Justify higher fees and bonuses.

Meanwhile, simple transparent index funds often outperform after fees.

That is precisely why the Supreme Court’s Intel case matters so much.

As discussed previously in The Supreme Court’s Intel Case Is About Secrecy, Fake Benchmarks and Fiduciary Illusions, the private markets industry depends on preventing participants from seeing what meaningful comparisons would actually reveal. https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/01/17/the-supreme-courts-intel-case-is-about-secrecy-fake-benchmarks-and-fiduciary-illusions/

Because once participants compare:

  • true fees,
  • true liquidity risk,
  • true valuations,
  • and true after-fee performance

against low-cost public alternatives, the illusion breaks down.

The Industry Knows Transparency Is the Real Threat

The most revealing quote in the entire CalPERS investigation may be this statement from CalPERS CEO Marcie Frost on CNBC:

“CalPERS is not sharing the limited partnership agreements. CalPERS is not sharing any side letters… We are extremely transparent… But frankly, private markets are private for a reason…”

That single sentence captures the entire private-equity model.

Private markets are “private” because transparency threatens fees.

The secrecy protects:

  • side-letter arrangements,
  • valuation games,
  • portfolio-company fees,
  • subscription-line engineering,
  • fee layering,
  • secondary-sale discounts,
  • political relationships,
  • and benchmark manipulation.

The industry cannot tolerate sunlight because sunlight would expose how much of private equity’s reported “alpha” comes from:

  • stale marks,
  • leverage,
  • fee extraction,
  • and benchmark engineering.

“Pension Fight Club” Exposes the Fear

The movie Pension Fight Club captures something the industry desperately wants to avoid: ordinary retirees beginning to ask questions.

The film repeatedly focuses on:

  • secrecy,
  • intimidation,
  • missing records,
  • hidden fees,
  • consultant conflicts,
  • and retaliation against pension critics.

One recurring theme is that pension beneficiaries are treated as adversaries once they demand transparency.  Free trailer at  https://pensionfightclub.com/  low fee for full movie.

That aligns perfectly with the findings of the CalPERS investigation, which documented coordinated efforts by pension officials and industry allies to undermine participant scrutiny and participant-funded investigations.

The message from the industry is clear:

Participants may fund the system.
But they are not supposed to understand the system.

The DOL’s Proposed Rule Is a Gift to Wall Street

The DOL claims its proposal is “asset neutral.”

But there is no such thing as neutrality when one side:

  • hides fees,
  • manipulates benchmarks,
  • controls valuations,
  • limits disclosure,
  • restricts liquidity,
  • and markets misleading performance metrics.

As Phalippou warns, allowing private equity into participant-directed retirement plans without strict disclosure and benchmarking rules does not reduce risk.

It merely transfers the risk to retirement savers.

The irony is overwhelming.

ERISA imposed strict disclosure rules on mutual funds precisely because regulators recognized that retirement savers could not evaluate opaque products.

Now the DOL proposes opening 401(k)s to products far more opaque than anything ERISA originally allowed.

This is not modernization.

It is deregulation for Wall Street’s most secretive and highest-fee industry.

The Core Problem Is Not Complexity — It Is Incentives

Private equity defenders constantly argue that critics simply “do not understand” sophisticated investments.

That is false.

The issue is not complexity.

The issue is incentives.

The industry earns dramatically higher fees when:

  • valuations are opaque,
  • benchmarks are fictional,
  • costs are hidden,
  • and comparisons are impossible.

Transparency threatens the economics of the business itself.

That is why private equity fights:

  • public records requests,
  • disclosure reform,
  • benchmark standardization,
  • independent valuation review,
  • and participant oversight.

If private equity truly delivered superior risk-adjusted returns after all fees and expenses, transparency would help the industry.

Instead, the industry treats transparency as an existential danger.

That tells you everything you need to know.

https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/05/04/the-diversification-lie-how-private-equity-and-private-credit-use-corrupt-accounting-to-hijack-pension-and-401k-allocations/https://commonsense401kproject.com/2025/10/27/private-equity-as-an-erisa-prohibited-transaction/

Target Date Fund Fiduciary Due Diligence Guardrail Checklist

Looking “Under the Hood” of CIT-Based Target Date Funds

Core Fiduciary Principle

Target Date Funds (“TDFs”) frequently comprise 50% or more of total 401(k) assets and often serve as the plan’s Qualified Default Investment Alternative (“QDIA”).

CFA institute warns that the DOL pathway allowing alternatives needs stronger Guardrails especially around target date funds.  https://blogs.cfainstitute.org/marketintegrity/2026/05/26/the-dol-pathway-for-private-assets-in-401ks-are-the-guardrails-strong-enough/

Accordingly, fiduciaries must evaluate:

  • not only the Target Date Fund itself,
  • but each underlying investment component individually.

Historically, most Target Date Funds operated within SEC-registered mutual funds, where:

  • accounting standards,
  • valuation rules,
  • leverage restrictions,
  • liquidity requirements,
  • performance reporting,
  • and fee disclosure obligations
    provided meaningful investor protections.

However, increasingly, Target Date Funds are being moved into weakly regulated state-bank Collective Investment Trusts (“CITs”), where fiduciaries may encounter:

  • hidden leverage,
  • opaque valuation methodologies,
  • affiliated transactions,
  • undisclosed spread compensation,
  • private credit,
  • private equity,
  • insurance products,
  • crypto exposure,
  • and other difficult-to-value assets
    that historically were restricted, impractical, or prohibited within SEC mutual funds.

The fiduciary obligation therefore requires substantially enhanced due diligence.


I. TARGET DATE FUND STRUCTURE REVIEW

A. Vehicle Structure

Questions

  • Is the TDF:
    • SEC mutual fund,
    • CIT,
    • insurance separate account,
    • managed account,
    • or hybrid structure?
  • Who regulates the structure?
  • Is the CIT overseen by:
    • OCC,
    • state banking regulator,
    • or trust company?

Key Concern

State-bank CITs may operate under materially weaker disclosure and transparency requirements than SEC mutual funds.


B. Underlying Holdings Transparency

Questions

  • Are complete underlying holdings disclosed?
  • How frequently?
  • Daily?
  • Quarterly?
  • Annually?
  • Is “look-through” transparency available for all underlying vehicles?

Red Flags

  • “Proprietary confidential holdings”
  • Delayed reporting
  • Aggregated or vague asset descriptions
  • Refusal to disclose private holdings

II. UNDERLYING ASSET CLASS REVIEW

A. Private Equity Exposure

Questions

  • Does the TDF contain:
    • private equity,
    • venture capital,
    • co-investments,
    • secondary funds,
    • continuation vehicles?

Required Due Diligence

  • PME benchmarking
  • IRR vs. time-weighted return comparison
  • Fee layering analysis
  • Capital call liquidity modeling
  • Valuation methodology review

Key Questions

  • Are valuations independently verified?
  • Are assets Level 3?
  • Are marks controlled by the manager?
  • Are continuation funds used to avoid losses?

Red Flags

  • Non-investable benchmarks
  • IRR-only reporting
  • Missing public market comparisons
  • Hidden carried interest
  • Subscription credit lines

B. Private Credit Exposure

Questions

  • Does the TDF contain:
    • direct lending,
    • private debt,
    • BDC exposure,
    • CLOs,
    • NAV loans,
    • structured credit,
    • mezzanine lending?

Required Due Diligence

  • Default stress testing
  • Recovery analysis
  • Liquidity modeling
  • Mark-to-market methodology review

Critical Questions

  • Who rates the underlying private credit?
    • Moody’s?
    • S&P?
    • Fitch?
    • KBRA?
    • internal models?
    • Egan-Jones?
  • Are ratings investment grade only because of weak methodologies?

Red Flags

  • Level 3 pricing
  • Internal marks
  • Illiquid side pockets
  • Affiliated originations
  • Weak independent valuation

C. Annuity / Insurance Exposure

Questions

  • Does the TDF contain:
    • fixed annuities,
    • guaranteed income products,
    • synthetic wraps,
    • insurance separate accounts,
    • guaranteed minimum withdrawal products?

Required Due Diligence

  • Insurer CDS spreads
  • Credit ratings
  • State insurance regulator review
  • Downgrade clause analysis
  • Spread compensation disclosure
  • General Account asset review

Critical Questions

  • Is there a downgrade termination clause?
  • What percentage of General Account assets are:
    • Treasuries,
    • private credit,
    • commercial real estate,
    • structured products?
  • Is the insurer privately owned by private equity?

Red Flags

  • No liquidity rights
  • Book-value-only accounting
  • No mark-to-market transparency
  • Captive reinsurance
  • Hidden spread compensation

D. Crypto / Digital Asset Exposure

Questions

  • Is there direct or indirect crypto exposure?
  • Through:
    • ETFs,
    • venture funds,
    • tokenized assets,
    • miners,
    • stablecoins,
    • exchanges,
    • private blockchain vehicles?

Required Due Diligence

  • Custody review
  • Valuation review
  • Counterparty review
  • Liquidity analysis
  • Regulatory status review

Red Flags

  • Offshore custodians
  • Unregulated exchanges
  • Token valuation opacity
  • Leverage
  • Staking arrangements

III. ACCOUNTING AND VALUATION REVIEW

A. Mark-to-Market Transparency

Questions

  • Which assets are:
    • Level 1,
    • Level 2,
    • Level 3?
  • What percentage relies on:
    • models,
    • appraisals,
    • manager discretion?

Key Concern

CITs may create “stale NAV” problems where risk is materially understated.


B. Performance Benchmarking

Questions

  • Are benchmarks:
    • investable,
    • transparent,
    • independently calculated?

Red Flags

  • CPI-plus benchmarks
  • Custom blended benchmarks
  • Self-created benchmarks
  • Non-public benchmark methodologies

Required Analysis

Compare:

  • actual returns,
  • volatility,
  • drawdowns,
  • Sharpe ratios,
    against:
  • low-cost public index alternatives.

C. Smoothing and Return Manipulation

Questions

  • Are valuations artificially smoothed?
  • Does the TDF show unusually low volatility inconsistent with underlying risks?

Red Flags

  • “Too smooth” performance
  • Reduced reported volatility from appraisal-based assets
  • Infrequent pricing

IV. LIQUIDITY AND REDEMPTION RISK

A. Liquidity Mismatch

Questions

Can daily participant liquidity be supported if:

  • underlying assets are multi-year illiquid investments?

Key Concern

401(k) participants may have daily liquidity rights while underlying assets may require:

  • years to liquidate,
  • lockups,
  • gates,
  • or side pockets.

B. Suspension Rights

Questions

Can:

  • withdrawals,
  • transfers,
  • exchanges,
  • or redemptions
    be suspended?

Red Flags

  • Gate provisions
  • Market stress restrictions
  • Delayed NAV processing

V. FEES, SPREADS, AND CONFLICTS

A. Layered Fees

Questions

Are there:

  • management fees,
  • performance fees,
  • carried interest,
  • wrap fees,
  • consulting fees,
  • sub-advisory fees,
  • recordkeeping revenue sharing?

Required Analysis

Calculate:

  • total look-through cost,
  • all indirect compensation,
  • embedded spread compensation.

B. Proprietary Product Conflicts

Questions

Are underlying investments:

  • proprietary,
  • affiliated,
  • revenue-sharing arrangements,
  • or tied to recordkeeper compensation?

Red Flags

  • Proprietary CITs
  • Affiliated private funds
  • Captive insurance products
  • Shelf-space payments

VI. REGULATORY AND LEGAL REVIEW

A. SEC vs. CIT Protections

Questions

Which SEC protections are absent because the TDF operates as a CIT?

Important Areas

  • Performance fee restrictions
  • Liquidity rules
  • Independent board oversight
  • Valuation controls
  • Public disclosure standards

B. ERISA Prohibited Transaction Analysis

Required Question

Has independent ERISA counsel issued a written legal opinion explaining:

  • why the TDF structure does not involve prohibited transactions,
  • why all compensation is reasonable,
  • and why affiliated arrangements comply with ERISA §§406(a) and 406(b)?

Special Concern

Underlying:

  • annuities,
  • proprietary private credit,
  • insurance products,
  • and affiliated private funds
    may create hidden party-in-interest conflicts.

VII. STRESS TESTING

Required Scenario Analysis

Stress Events

  • 30% private credit markdown
  • commercial real estate collapse
  • insurer downgrade
  • liquidity freeze
  • crypto crash
  • redemption run
  • private equity write-downs

Questions

What happens to:

  • participant balances,
  • liquidity,
  • transfer rights,
  • NAV calculations,
  • and fiduciary exposure?

VIII. CORE FIDUCIARY QUESTIONS

Fiduciaries Should Ask:

Transparency

  • Can we fully explain every major underlying investment?

Liquidity

  • Are participants promised daily liquidity backed by illiquid assets?

Valuation

  • Are assets genuinely marked to market?

Compensation

  • Is hidden spread or affiliated compensation present?

Benchmarking

  • Are returns genuinely superior after all fees and risks?

Prudence

  • Would these investments survive SEC mutual fund scrutiny?

IX. DOCUMENTATION REQUIREMENTS

Committee Files Should Include

  • Full look-through holdings
  • Asset class risk memoranda
  • Independent valuation reviews
  • Benchmark comparisons
  • Liquidity stress tests
  • Prohibited Transaction legal opinions
  • Fee and spread analyses
  • CDS and insurer reviews
  • Regulatory assessments

X. CENTRAL FIDUCIARY WARNING

The movement of Target Date Funds from SEC mutual funds into opaque CIT structures may permit inclusion of:

  • hidden leverage,
  • private credit,
  • private equity,
  • annuities,
  • crypto exposure,
  • and difficult-to-value assets
    that historically faced meaningful SEC constraints.

Because TDFs frequently represent the majority of participant retirement assets, fiduciaries must analyze each underlying component investment individually — not merely rely on the Target Date Fund label, branding, or consultant assurances.

The fiduciary duty is not to trust the surface level fund.

The fiduciary duty is to look through it.

ERISA Fixed Annuity Due Diligence Checklist

Consultant and Fiduciary Review Framework

Purpose

This checklist is intended to assist ERISA fiduciaries, consultants, investment committees, and plan sponsors in evaluating fixed annuity products offered within 401(k), 403(b), stable value, guaranteed income, or pension risk transfer structures.

The objective is to determine:

  • whether the annuity provides adequate compensation for insurer credit and liquidity risk,
  • whether the contract may involve prohibited transaction concerns,
  • whether hidden spread compensation exists,
  • and whether the product is prudent relative to available alternatives.

I. CREDIT QUALITY AND MARKET-BASED RISK REVIEW

A. Public Debt Yield Comparison

Questions

  • What yield is the insurer currently paying on publicly traded senior notes?
  • What spread over Treasuries does the market require?
  • How does the annuity credited rate compare to:
    • senior note yields,
    • subordinated debt yields,
    • institutional funding costs,
    • and peer insurer bond spreads?

Key Analysis

If the insurer issues senior notes at 5.3% while crediting annuity holders only 3.0%, evaluate:

  • retained spread,
  • hidden compensation,
  • and whether participants are undercompensated for insurer credit risk and illiquidity.

Documentation

  • Current note prospectuses
  • TRACE bond yields
  • Bloomberg yields
  • Treasury spread analysis

B. Credit Default Swaps (CDS)

Questions

  • What is the insurer’s current 5-year CDS spread?
  • Has CDS widened materially over:
    • 1 year,
    • 3 years,
    • or since contract inception?
  • Does the CDS market imply deterioration inconsistent with insurer ratings?

Key Analysis

CDS spreads may provide a more market-sensitive measure of insurer default risk than rating agencies.

Suggested Thresholds

  • <50 bps = lower perceived risk
  • 50–100 bps = moderate concern
  •  

100 bps = elevated concern

  • Rapid widening = potential early warning signal

Documentation

  • Bloomberg CDS data
  • ICE/CMA pricing
  • Historical spread charts

C. Ratings Review

Questions

  • What are the:
    • Moody’s,
    • S&P,
    • Fitch,
    • AM Best ratings?
  • Are ratings on:
    • negative outlook,
    • watchlist,
    • or downgrade review?
  • Have ratings agencies cited:
    • commercial real estate,
    • private credit,
    • liquidity,
    • or valuation risks?

Important

Ratings often lag actual market deterioration.

Documentation

  • Ratings reports
  • Outlook changes
  • Recent downgrade history

II. CONTRACT STRUCTURE AND LIQUIDITY

A. Downgrade Clause

Critical Question

Does the annuity permit termination or liquidation upon:

  • ratings downgrade,
  • CDS widening,
  • RBC deterioration,
  • or insolvency concerns?

Questions

  • Is there a downgrade trigger?
  • At what level?
    • BBB?
    • BB?
  • Can assets be moved without:
    • surrender charges,
    • market value adjustments,
    • or penalties?

Key Analysis

Absence of downgrade rights may expose participants to trapped-credit risk.


B. Surrender and Exit Restrictions

Questions

  • What are:
    • surrender charges,
    • book-to-market adjustments,
    • waiting periods,
    • transfer restrictions?
  • Is liquidity daily, quarterly, annual?
  • Can the insurer suspend withdrawals?

Key Analysis

Liquidity restrictions materially increase effective risk.


C. Market Value Transparency

Questions

  • Is the contract carried:
    • at book value,
    • market value,
    • or insurer discretion?
  • Are underlying assets disclosed?
  • Are marks independently verified?

III. COMPETITIVE RATE ANALYSIS

A. Peer Comparison

Questions

How does the credited rate compare to:

  • TIAA Traditional,
  • MassMutual,
  • New York Life,
  • Prudential,
  • MetLife,
  • synthetic stable value funds,
  • Treasury securities,
  • high-quality short/intermediate bond funds?

Key Analysis

A materially lower rate may imply:

  • excessive retained spread,
  • weak negotiation,
  • or prohibited compensation structures.

B. Treasury and Risk-Free Comparison

Questions

  • How does the annuity rate compare to:
    • 2-year Treasury,
    • 5-year Treasury,
    • 10-year Treasury,
    • money market yields?

Key Analysis

If annuity rates are below Treasury yields despite materially higher illiquidity and credit risk, fiduciary justification should be documented.


IV. GENERAL ACCOUNT ASSET QUALITY

A. Treasury / AAA Exposure

Questions

What percentage of General Account assets are invested in:

  • U.S. Treasuries,
  • Agencies,
  • AAA securities,
  • investment grade corporates,
  • below-investment-grade assets,
  • private credit,
  • commercial real estate,
  • CLOs,
  • alternatives?

Key Analysis

Higher allocations to:

  • private credit,
  • CRE,
  • structured products,
  • or illiquid assets
    increase annuity risk.

Suggested Review

Demand detailed NAIC Schedule D asset breakdowns.


B. Private Credit Exposure

Questions

  • What percentage of the General Account is private credit?
  • Is private credit:
    • internally originated,
    • affiliated,
    • or third-party managed?
  • Are assets level-3?
  • Are marks independently validated?

Special Concern

Private equity-owned insurers may:

  • use aggressive valuation methodologies,
  • engage in affiliated transactions,
  • or overstate NAV stability.

C. Who Rates the Private Credit?

Questions

Are underlying private credit securities rated by:

  • Moody’s,
  • S&P,
  • Fitch,
  • KBRA,
    or instead by:
  • Egan-Jones,
  • internal insurer models,
  • or lesser-known agencies?

Key Analysis

Reliance on less rigorous or issuer-paid ratings may materially understate risk.


V. REGULATORY REVIEW

A. State Insurance Regulator

Questions

  • Which state regulates the insurer?
  • Is the regulator considered:
    • strong,
    • weak,
    • industry-captured,
    • or aggressive?

Particular Areas of Concern

  • Iowa
  • Bermuda-affiliated structures
  • Captive reinsurance jurisdictions

Questions

  • Does the insurer use:
    • captives,
    • offshore affiliates,
    • reserve financing vehicles?

B. RBC and Statutory Capital

Questions

  • Current RBC ratio?
  • Trend over 5 years?
  • Sensitivity to:
    • CRE losses,
    • private credit markdowns,
    • downgrades?

Key Analysis

Strong RBC ratios may still depend on optimistic asset valuations.


VI. DISCLOSURE AND SPREAD COMPENSATION

A. Spread Disclosure

Questions

Does the insurer disclose:

  • investment spread,
  • net interest margin,
  • retained spread,
  • compensation from General Account investing?

Key Analysis

Failure to disclose spread economics may impair fiduciary evaluation.


B. Revenue Sharing and Compensation

Questions

Do:

  • consultants,
  • recordkeepers,
  • advisors,
  • brokers,
  • or affiliates
    receive direct or indirect compensation connected to the annuity?

Questions

  • Shelf-space fees?
  • Revenue sharing?
  • Subtransfer agency fees?
  • Proprietary product incentives?

VII. PROHIBITED TRANSACTION REVIEW

A. Legal Opinion Requirement

Required Question

Has independent ERISA counsel issued a written legal opinion explaining why:

  • the annuity is not a prohibited transaction under ERISA §§406(a) and 406(b),
  • insurer spread compensation is reasonable,
  • and all compensation is fully disclosed?

Important Legal Issues

Evaluate:

  • party-in-interest status,
  • insurer compensation,
  • affiliated transactions,
  • proprietary products,
  • General Account lending,
  • and hidden spread retention.

Required Documentation

  • Independent ERISA legal opinion
  • PT exemption analysis
  • Compensation disclosure memorandum

VIII. STRESS TESTING

A. Scenario Analysis

Stress Scenarios

  • 30% private credit markdown
  • CRE impairment
  • downgrade to BBB
  • downgrade below investment grade
  • liquidity run
  • widening CDS spreads
  • reinsurance counterparty failure

Questions

  • What happens to:
    • participant liquidity,
    • credited rates,
    • insurer capital,
    • surrender value,
    • and contract termination rights?

IX. FIDUCIARY DOCUMENTATION

Committee Record Should Include

  • Comparison to market bond yields
  • Comparison to peer annuity products
  • CDS analysis
  • Liquidity analysis
  • Downgrade clause analysis
  • State regulator assessment
  • Underlying asset quality review
  • PT legal review
  • Written rationale for prudence determination

X. CORE FIDUCIARY QUESTION

The central fiduciary issue is:

“Are participants being adequately compensated for:

  • insurer credit risk,
  • illiquidity,
  • opacity,
  • valuation uncertainty,
  • and lack of marketability,
    relative to available market alternatives?”

If not, fiduciaries should evaluate:

  • whether the annuity is prudent,
  • whether participants are subsidizing insurer spread profits,
  • and whether the arrangement may involve prohibited transaction concerns.

https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/03/11/tiaa-traditional-annuity-is-a-prohibited-transaction/ https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/05/20/annuity-collapse-shows-why-insurers-are-a-growing-danger-in-401ks/