The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), On April 20, 2026, issued a joint proposal that marks a substantial evolution in the regulatory landscape for private funds, necessitating significant adjustments in reporting methodologies and data granularity.
The proposal follows a period of significant regulatory uncertainty concerning Form PF. Form PF is the confidential reporting form for certain SEC-registered investment advisers to private funds, including those also registered with the CFTC. Rather than implement the extensive 2024 amendments, regulators have elected to pursue a revision and simplification intended to alleviate regulatory burdens while maintaining the collection of essential systemic risk data, with the goal of “significantly reducing burdens for advisers required to file Form PF.”
The most immediate impact of the proposal will be felt by small to mid-sized managers, who will see their reporting burdens effectively erased or dramatically reduced.
General Private Fund Advisers: The baseline threshold for an SEC-registered investment adviser to file Form PF will increase from $150 million to $1 billion in private fund assets under management (AUM).
Large Hedge Fund Advisers: The threshold to qualify as a large hedge fund adviser will jump from $1.5 billion to $10 billion in hedge fund AUM. The proposal also builds in a five-year staff review of this new $10 billion threshold.
Qualifying Hedge Funds: The $500 million net asset value (NAV) threshold used to determine which specific funds within a large hedge fund adviser qualify, though regulators are soliciting comments on whether to bump this up to $750 million or $1 billion.
In comparison to the current form, the structure of the proposed form itself has undergone modifications, with the elimination of the distinction between Sections 2a and 2b.
The proposal introduces a comprehensive set of new data points, encompassing NAICS codes, adjusted exposures and detailed breakdowns of investor classifications, borrowings and counterparty exposures.
Additional reporting requirements include GAV/NAV for all three reporting months, unfunded commitments, contributions, withdrawals, expanded investor classifications, IRR and new strategies such as digital assets. These enhancements are intended to provide regulators with a more granular and comprehensive overview of the private fund industry.
The structure of counterparty exposures and borrowings questions has been revamped, and interest rate derivatives are now categorized separately with dollar value reporting for trading and clearing questions. Also, new questions demand exposure reporting based on currencies, countries and sectors.
The proposal also introduces significant changes to static data requirements. Funds will now be required to disclose their registration status as a CPO or CTA, as well as their fund type, including commodity pool, UCITS, AIF or money market fund.
The form also requires specific details about trading vehicles, including legal name, LEI and RSSD ID, as well as the nature of the fund's involvement with the trading vehicle. Additionally, open-ended and closed-ended funds must provide specific information about their structure and redemption terms, while feeder funds must disclose details about their master fund investment.
Collectively, these enhancements aim to provide regulators with a more comprehensive, granular and risk-sensitive dataset, facilitating a deeper understanding of the private fund industry and enabling more effective oversight.
Borrowings and Counterparty Exposures
Currency, Country and Sector Exposures
Asset Exposures
Trading Activity
Risk Questions
Rationalizing Section 5 Current Reporting
Section 6 Private Equity Quarterly Event Reporting
Status Quo for Private Equity and Liquidity Funds
Looking Ahead
This proposal was published in the Federal Register on April 24, 2026. Comments should be received on or before June 23, 2026.
The proposal specifically requests comment on the threshold amounts, including alternative levels of $250 million, $500 million, $2 billion, $3 billion and $4 billion for the general threshold, and $2 billion, $3 billion, $5 billion, $15 billion and $20 billion for the large hedge fund adviser threshold. If the 2026 proposal is adopted, the release establishes a transition period of at least 12 months from the date of publication in the Federal Register.
Managers should start engaging in conversations about how these changes to the current form impact them, including sourcing new data points, adoption of methodologies for computing responses to amended and newly added questions and designing a solution to implement the amendments.
Contact us to learn how SS&C can help you in this process.