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The Eisenhower Executive Office Building in 2021.
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Trump Labor Department Proposes Rule Letting 401(k)s Invest in Crypto and Other High‑Risk Alternatives

The Trump administration’s Labor Department has filed a proposed rule that would allow 401(k) retirement plans to invest in a broad range of high‑risk “alternative” assets, including cryptocurrencies, private equity, private credit and hedge‑fund‑style products, a move the White House is pitching as expanding worker 'choice' and 'liberation.' Under the change, employers and plan fiduciaries could add these complex products alongside traditional mutual funds and bond offerings, potentially exposing tens of millions of savers to extreme volatility, illiquidity, opaque valuations and multiple layers of fees. Critics, including retirement and consumer‑protection experts, warn that most workers are ill‑equipped to evaluate such instruments and that losses or lockups could hit just as people need access to their nest eggs, undermining the original purpose of 401(k)s as relatively stable, diversified retirement vehicles. The piece details how private credit and private equity funds can mask losses through hard‑to‑verify valuations and withdrawal limits, while crypto funds can swing wildly in value within hours or days, raising the risk that downturns could simultaneously hammer multiple parts of a saver’s portfolio. Analysts also caution that channeling large volumes of tax‑advantaged retirement money into thinly regulated corners of finance could amplify systemic risk, turning what the administration calls liberation into what opponents describe online as a 'casino with your 401(k).'

Retirement Policy and Regulation Cryptocurrency and Financial Risk

📌 Key Facts

  • The Department of Labor filed a rule last week that would let 401(k) plans invest in cryptocurrency, private equity, private credit, hedge‑fund‑style products and other alternative assets.
  • The White House frames the change as expanding 'choice' and 'liberation' for workers, while Republican lawmakers praised giving savers access to alternative assets when a fiduciary deems them appropriate.
  • Critics argue most workers lack the expertise to manage such high‑risk, opaque products and warn that illiquidity, valuation disputes, withdrawal limits and high fees could jeopardize decades of retirement savings, especially in a market downturn.

📊 Relevant Data

45.1% of working-age households in the US have no retirement savings, with nearly 60% for Black/African American households and more than 70% for Hispanic/Latino households.

Disparities in the Pursuit of Financial Security in Retirement — Society of Actuaries

The overall retirement savings rate for White workers was 10%, compared to 6.8% for Black workers and 7.5% for Latino workers in 2025.

Racial Gaps Persist in Retirement Savings — 401k Specialist

Research indicates that including private assets in retirement plans can increase post-fee retirement wealth by at least 10% over time, though with higher fees and risks compared to traditional investments.

Smart Implementation of Alternative Assets in 401(k)s Will Increase Taxpayer Assets While Avoiding Regulation Ping-Pong — National Taxpayers Union

Roughly two-thirds of US cryptocurrency owners are aged 30-59, with 82% of owners aged 18-44 and only 7% aged 55 and above.

Cryptocurrency Ownership Data | United States — Triple-A

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April 09, 2026