Stock Markets April 20, 2026 12:04 PM

U.S. Regulators Propose Narrowing Private Fund Reporting Requirements

SEC and CFTC offer revisions intended to ease disclosure burdens for a $26 trillion private fund sector

By Maya Rios
U.S. Regulators Propose Narrowing Private Fund Reporting Requirements

The Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission on Monday issued a joint proposal to scale back enhanced disclosure rules for private funds. The agencies said the adjustments would ease compliance burdens while preserving the collection of information they consider necessary. The proposal raises asset thresholds that determine which advisers must report, significantly reducing the number of firms subject to the regime.

Key Points

  • SEC and CFTC jointly proposed changes to enhanced private fund disclosure rules covering the $26 trillion private fund sector.
  • The agencies say the changes aim to cut compliance burdens while keeping necessary information collection intact.
  • Thresholds for advisers required to report would rise - from $150 million to $1 billion for smaller advisers and from $1.5 billion to $10 billion for large hedge fund advisers - reducing the number of firms covered.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) on Monday unveiled a joint proposal to modify enhanced reporting requirements for the private fund industry, which the agencies say is worth $26 trillion.

Under the proposal, the agencies would relax the coverage of the enhanced disclosure rules by raising the asset thresholds that determine which investment advisers must provide detailed information about their activities. The stated objective is to limit the compliance burden on smaller managers while continuing to gather what regulators deem to be necessary and appropriate information.

Regulatory intent and leadership comments

The SEC said the proposed changes are intended to reduce burdens on private funds and investment advisers while maintaining requirements for the collection of relevant data. SEC Chairman Paul Atkins was quoted saying that a central element of his agenda is restoring balance to disclosure obligations and reducing compliance costs where possible.

Scope of prior rules and reasons given for them

Previously, under President Joe Biden, the SEC and CFTC had jointly adopted rules requiring hedge funds, private equity firms and other private fund advisers to report a broad range of information. That reporting covered exposures to investments, counterparties and currencies; exposures by country and industry; the performance of investments by strategy; and portfolio liquidity. The agencies said those disclosures were necessary to detect risk in the financial system.

Political and implementation context

At the time the original rules were adopted, Republican members of the SEC and CFTC argued the requirements were excessive and risked exposing sensitive confidential data. The proposal notes that there are currently no Democrats appointed to either commission. Since taking control last year, the Trump administration has repeatedly delayed the effective date of the reporting rules to allow time for possible modifications.

Key proposed threshold changes

The revisions announced on Monday would narrow the set of advisers required to disclose by lifting qualifying thresholds. For smaller advisers, the threshold would increase from $150 million in assets under management to $1 billion. For large hedge fund advisers, the qualifying threshold would rise from $1.5 billion to $10 billion. These adjustments would reduce the number of firms subject to the enhanced reporting regime.

Risks

  • Regulatory tension - Republican commissioners previously warned the original rules could expose sensitive confidential data, indicating ongoing disagreement over the balance between transparency and confidentiality.
  • Uncertainty in rule implementation - repeated delays to the rules' effective date create uncertainty for funds and advisers as the final scope of reporting obligations remains in flux.

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