
- The U.S. Department of Labor has proposed a rule spelling out how fiduciaries may include assets such as crypto and private equity in 401(k) plans.
- Fiduciaries that follow the rule’s process-based standards could receive safe harbor protection against lawsuits over those investment choices.
The U.S. retirement plan may be closer to crypto again, this time through the front door of formal rulemaking.
The Department of Labor has proposed a new rule that would clarify how fiduciaries can weigh alternative assets, including private equity and cryptocurrencies, when building a 401(k) plan. The point is not to tell employers to load retirement plans with volatile or illiquid assets. It is to define a process that managers can follow if they want to go there.
A safer legal lane for alternative assets
At the center of the proposal is a safe harbor framework. Fiduciaries would need to evaluate a set of factors, including performance, fees, liquidity, valuation and complexity before adding an alternative investment option.
The draft also refers to benchmarking as part of that review. If that prudence standard is met, the rule would give fiduciaries added legal protection against litigation.
That matters because the legal risk has long been one of the biggest barriers keeping private-market funds and crypto products out of mainstream retirement plans. Even when asset managers and some advisers argued that limited exposure could improve diversification, many plan sponsors stayed away. The liability risk was simply too high, or felt that way.
Crypto gets a mention, but not a free pass
For digital assets, the proposal is notable less because it opens the floodgates and more because it puts crypto inside the same fiduciary framework as other alternative assets. That is a shift in tone. Still, the rule does not remove the hard questions around volatility, valuation, custody and participant suitability. Those remain very real.
The Labor Department has opened a 60-day public comment period before any final rule is adopted. For the crypto industry, that means this is not immediate distribution into retirement accounts. But it is a regulatory signal that access may increasingly depend on process, documentation and risk controls rather than blanket hesitation alone.
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