consistent and detailed enough. If regulators push for tighter controls, managers may need more independent valuation work and clearer investor approval processes, making these deals slower and more expensive – and making it harder to “roll” assets forward at manager-set marks.
Why should I care?
For you: Retirement savings can feel the knock-on effects.
Many pensions and retirement plans put money into private equity, so changes in how continuation funds work can filter through to everyday savers. More scrutiny usually means more documentation, more third-party pricing, and stricter checks around who benefits from a deal. That can make private-equity valuations look less smooth over time, because assets may get repriced more often or face more pressure to reach a clear liquidity event like a sale. It can also make cash distributions from older funds less predictable, which matters for big long-term investors that rely on returns from mature funds to keep funding new commitments.
