The update concerns SEC and CFTC amendments to Form PF reporting requirements for SEC-registered investment advisers managing private funds, which directly relates to investment advisory services and asset management oversight.
The mention of private credit market identification and exposure reporting for hedge fund managers suggests a secondary focus on fixed income and credit products, though the primary regulatory thrust is on investment advisory compliance.
Specialism
The update proposes amendments to Form PF filing thresholds and requirements for private fund advisers, which constitutes a mandatory regulatory reporting obligation affecting data submission formats and frequency.
Mandatory inheritance: Regulatory Reporting is a child of Supervision, so Supervision must be raised as the secondary tag.
Keywords
homepage,IM What's New
2026-04-21 11:24:02·ggallwey@vixio.com
Meta Id
3078534
Content ID
3087016
GUID
0ca56b41feb9188d9bb32306a1a26832
Pipeline Progress
🔄 Pipeline Journey
⏱
10s
total
✓
Queued11:23:51
+0s
✓
Metadata11:23:51
+0s
✓
S3 Content11:23:51
+0s
✓
Extracted11:23:51
+6s
✓
LLM Gen11:23:57
+4s
✓
Stored11:24:01
TITLE: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission Jointly Propose Amendments to Reduce Private Fund Reporting Burdens
BODY:
On April 20, 2026, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) jointly proposed amendments to Form PF, the confidential reporting form for certain SEC-registered investment advisers to private funds. The proposed amendments aim to reduce compliance burdens for advisers while maintaining the collection of necessary information for systemic risk monitoring and investor protection.
The key proposed changes include raising the filing threshold from $150 million to $1 billion in private fund assets under management, which would eliminate filing requirements for approximately half of the advisers currently required to file Form PF. The proposal also raises the exposure reporting threshold for "large" hedge fund advisers from $1.5 billion to $10 billion in hedge fund assets under management. Despite these increases, Form PF would continue to collect information on over 90 percent of private fund gross assets and maintain detailed exposure information for large hedge fund managers. The proposed amendments would also streamline numerous Form PF requirements and enable identification of funds active in the private credit market. SEC Chairman Paul S. Atkins stated the amendments would "rationalize the scope of Form PF requirements" and bring the disclosure regime "back into alignment," while CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig emphasised the changes would "reduce the burdens associated with filing the form."
The proposing release will be published in the Federal Register, with a public comment period remaining open for 60 days following publication. Comments can be submitted through the SEC's public comment portal.
SEC.gov | SEC and CFTC Jointly Propose Amendments to Reduce Private Fund Reporting Burdens Skip to search field Skip to main content Official websites use .gov A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States. Secure .gov websites use HTTPS A lock ( Lock A locked padlock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites. More in this Section Press Release SEC and CFTC Jointly Propose Amendments to Reduce Private Fund Reporting Burdens For Immediate Release 2026-40 Washington D.C., April 20, 2026 — The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) jointly proposed amendments to reduce private fund reporting burdens while enabling the continued collection of necessary and appropriate information. The agencies proposed to amend Form PF, the confidential reporting form for certain SEC-registered investment advisers to private funds, including those that also are registered with the CFTC as commodity pool operators or commodity trading advisors. Form PF collects information designed to facilitate the Financial Stability Oversight Council’s (FSOC) monitoring of systemic risk in the financial markets. The SEC and CFTC use the information collected on Form PF in their investor protection efforts. “A key pillar of my agenda is restoring balance to disclosure obligations and reducing the cost of compliance wherever possible,” said SEC Chairman Paul S. Atkins. “Prior amendments to Form PF have led to overly burdensome disclosure requirements for advisers, distracting them from their core investment functions, often without a commensurate benefit to regulators’ use of the collected data. These proposed changes would help to rationalize the scope of Form PF requirements to support its purpose and bring our overall disclosure regime back into alignment.” “By raising the filing threshold and streamlining Form PF, we are taking steps to reduce the burdens associated with filing the form,” said CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig. “I look forward to reading the public comments to ensure we get these changes right so that we eliminate unnecessary costs and burdens for filers.” The proposed amendments would eliminate filing requirements for smaller advisers, who represent almost half of the advisers currently required to file Form PF, by raising the filing threshold from $150 million in private fund assets under management to $1 billion. The proposal would also raise the exposure reporting threshold for “large” hedge fund advisers from $1.5 billion in hedge fund assets under management to $10 billion. Form PF would continue to obtain information on over 90 percent of private fund gross assets and require detailed exposure information for funds managed by large hedge fund managers. In addition, the proposed amendments to Form PF would enable a method to identify funds that are active in the private credit market. In addition to amending these thresholds, the proposal would eliminate or streamline many Form PF requirements, significantly reducing burdens for advisers required to file Form PF. The proposal requests comments on all the proposed amendments. The proposing release for the amendments will be published in the Federal Register, and the public comment period will remain open until 60 days after publication in the Federal Register. ### Last Reviewed or Updated: April 20, 2026 Resources Proposed Rule Fact Sheet Submit Public Comment