Keeping Your Retirement Savings Clear of the Government’s Thumb

Rick KahlerAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

For decades, a divide has limited the options for American workers who are saving for retirement. Assets held outside of retirement plans have access to hedge funds, private equity, real estate partnerships, and other alternatives that move differently from the stock market and can offer different kinds of returns. Meanwhile, 401(k) plans have long offered a limited menu — stock funds, bond funds, a target-date fund, perhaps a money market option, and little else.

This inequity matters because 401(k) plans are the first and easiest form of retirement savings for so many employees. Regulators assumed that plan participants, unlike more sophisticated investors with access to alternatives, lacked the knowledge to evaluate complex or higher-risk investments. Restricting their choices was a well-intentioned form of protection.

Bridging the Retirement Investment Gap

A new Trump administration policy may close this gap. An executive order directed the Department of Labor to open retirement plans to a broader range of investments and shield employers from the threat of lawsuits when they do.

The rationale is that government should be neutral on asset classes. It should not put its thumb on the scale by favoring some investment types over others. Marcia S. Wagner, founder of The Wagner Law Group, framed this clearly in a presentation at the 2026 Financial Planning Association SHIFT Conference. The relevant question is not what type of asset it is, but whether the people responsible for your retirement plan followed a prudent process and used fiduciary judgment in selecting it. I fully support this view.

Yet there is a contradiction. The same administration prohibited retirement plans from holding any investments tied to Russia or China, including Hong Kong and Macau. The legal exposure for plans that hold these assets may be criminal, not just civil. The national security concern is real, and I don’t dismiss it. But I would like someone in Washington to explain how banning investment in an entire nation’s assets is consistent with the principle that government should remain neutral.