The Barriers to Investing in Private Equity Are Too High

This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

By Frank Holmes, CEO for U.S. Global Investors

The rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer, and for that we can largely blame policies of envy that increasingly restrict investors’ access to wealth-building instruments.

Case in point: I was recently invited to participate in a private placement, and the required paperwork was, to put it mildly, discouraging. I don’t just mean that it would have taken an inordinate amount of time to complete. I mean that no ordinary retail investor could easily fill out the paperwork without the assistance of an attorney or accountant—or both. The entire process is so convoluted and complicated that it’s easier to take out a mortgage than it is to invest in private equity (PE) and venture capital (VC).

Which is a shame. Multiple studies have shown that alternatives such as PE and VC can far outperform publicly traded stocks. One study in particular showed that a hypothetical $10,000 investment in a fund that tracks the S&P 500 would have grown to $76,123 over the 30 years through 2017. Not bad—until you learn that the same $10,000, invested in private equity, would have grown to an average $211,071, or 2.5 times greater than the S&P 500 returns.

Granted, PE/VC have their own unique set of risks, and shares are extremely illiquid. But the way regulators have it set up, only the uber-wealthy—those who can afford a team of lawyers and accountants—are able to participate. The barriers are simply too high for 99 percent of investors, and so they’re locked out.

More and More Companies Choosing to Stay Private

This all comes at a time when companies are tapping private financing more and more in an effort to skirt going public. There are a multitude of reasons why companies are choosing to stay private, some of which I discussed last summer. One of the reasons is that publicly traded firms are facing tougher and costlier regulations. Growth in accounting and auditing fees for public companies nearly doubled between 2016 and 2017, while similar fees for private companies shrank somewhat.

And it’s not as if staying private is hurting companies. According to the Committee on Capital Markets Regulation (CCMR), U.S. companies have raised more than twice as much equity through private offerings than they did through initial public offerings (IPOs). In 2016 alone, companies raised as much as $110 billion through private offerings, 340 percent more than companies raised in IPOs.

Compounding this is the fact that the percentage of Americans with money invested in the public stock market is trailing earlier years. In an April survey, only 55 percent of Americans said they owned stocks, either directly or indirectly. That’s down considerably from the series high of 65 percent set in April 2007, soon before the financial crisis.