Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) is now auditioning for the role in the great 401(k) private equity food fight, and the hypocrisy is so rich you could spread it on a baguette and call it a three-Michelin-star dessert.
Call her Sen. Antoinette. While lecturing average American workers to content themselves with sad little index funds that go nowhere, Warren herself dines on higher-returning private investments like a Roman emperor at an all-you-can-eat toga party.
The mythology around Marie Antoinette claims the French royal was so hilariously detached from the starving peasants that she supposedly shrugged and said, “Let them eat cake.”
The senator is currently throwing a hissy fit over the Trump administration’s Labor Department rule, now open for public comment, that would finally let regular 401(k) holders get a taste of private-market investments instead of being trapped in the public-stock-and-bond kiddie pool forever.
Independent Women is bravely submitting comments and rallying others before the June 1 deadline to support the rule, because apparently someone has to stand up for the little guy against the lady who wrote a book about standing up for the little guy.
Warren recently badgered Empower Retirement, the nation’s second-largest retirement provider, for daring to suggest that maybe, just maybe, working people could benefit from private equity and private credit. She called private equity a “Wall Street time bomb” and darkly warned that letting actual workers near these things would only benefit... “private funds.”
The senator from Massachusetts has declared herself the self-appointed Protector of the Little Guy’s Nest Egg™. There’s just one teensy problem: the little guys aren’t allowed to have what she has.
Start with Warren’s own financial disclosures. Her largest retirement asset, valued between $1 million and $5 million, is parked in TIAA-CREF Traditional, a magical guaranteed-principal fund basically reserved for university professors and other academic nobility. It promises you’ll never lose a dime, offers a guaranteed minimum interest rate, and even throws in a lifetime income stream. Warren pulled in $88,423 from it in 2024 alone. That’s not a retirement plan. That’s a golden parachute made of Ivy League tears and tenure.
Pure, chocolate-covered hypocrisy: Among her holdings is a TIAA Real Estate Account worth between $500,000 and $1 million. You know, a private real estate fund. An alternative investment. The exact category she insists is far too scary, too opaque, and too “Wall Street” for the unwashed 401(k) masses. Sen. Antoinette feasts on alternatives while ordering the drawbridge raised and the moat filled with regulatory alligators for everyone else.
And it gets better. Massachusetts, the state she represents, has private equity swimming all through its public pension system. Harvard — where she built her entire brand — has a whopping 39% of its bloated endowment in private equity, overseen by a board crawling with Blackstone and General Atlantic execs. The same industry she demonizes daily from the Senate floor.
Private equity for me, but not for thee. Classic.
Nationally, about 89% of public pension funds are happily slurping up private equity returns. Thirty-four million public-sector workers — teachers, firefighters, cops — rely on that sweet 13.5% median annualized return over the last decade that crushed every other asset class, according to the American Investment Council.
But private-sector workers? Sorry, plebs. You get whatever sad menu your employer offers. President Trump’s executive order seeks to fix that by letting everyday Americans access alternatives under actual fiduciary rules and professional management.
Sen. Antoinette has yet to explain why a Massachusetts schoolteacher’s pension deserves those juicy returns while a Massachusetts factory worker does not. Or why her own TIAA Real Estate Account is sophisticated prudence but the same thing in a 401(k) is a “time bomb.”
Sure, there’s a real conversation to have about fees, liquidity, and safeguards. But Warren isn’t interested in responsible access. She just wants the door slammed shut.
The woman who built her entire career railing against a “rigged system” that protects the connected class has become the rigged system. Guaranteed returns for her. Private real estate for her. PE-backed pensions for her and her public-sector pals. Index-fund gruel for thee.
Time to end the double standard and let everyday Americans have retirement freedom instead of another helping of Sen. Antoinette’s famous cake.