SEC Rescinds Staff Position Limiting Registered Closed-End Funds’ Investments in Private Funds
SEC Rescinds Staff Position Limiting Registered Closed-End Funds’ Investments in Private Funds
On August 15, 2025, the Division of Investment Management (the “Division”) of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) published Accounting and Disclosure Information 2025-16 (ADI), providing updated guidance for registered closed-end funds that invest in private funds (CE-FOPFs). This guidance formalizes statements made by senior members of the SEC staff earlier this year that had reversed prior SEC staff guidance.
Historically, Division staff comments led many CE-FOPFs investing 15% or more in private funds to restrict their offerings to “accredited investors”[1] as defined under Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933 (the “1933 Act”) and require minimum initial investments of at least $25,000. This staff position was not reflected in any statute or formal rule.
The ADI clarifies that Division staff will no longer issue comments suggesting that CE-FOPFs restrict their offerings to accredited investors or limit private fund investments to 15% of their assets. The ADI notes that existing regulatory protections under federal securities laws provide adequate protection of investors in CE-FOPFs that indirectly invest in private funds. These include requirements that the CE-FOPF: (i) be managed by a registered investment adviser that owes fiduciary duties to the fund; (ii) be overseen by a board of directors, that also has fiduciary duties to the fund; and (iii) make certain periodic disclosures and bear liability for material omissions and misstatements. CF-FOPFs are also subject to the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”) and the rules promulgated thereunder, which impose high governance standards, require written compliance programs reasonably designed to ensure that the CE-FOPF does not violate federal securities laws, and impose leverage and capital structure limits, and restrictions on conflicted affiliate transactions.
The ADI also emphasizes areas that the Division staff will remain focused on when reviewing CE-FOPF registration statements, including:
The ADI states that CE-FOPFs that are currently operating and that have invested or seek to invest more than 15% of their assets in private funds and that have removed or plan to remove accredited investor and/or investment minimum limitations should file (i) amendments to their registration statements pursuant to Rule 486(a) or Rule 486(b) of the 1933 Act or (ii) prospectus supplement updates under Rule 424 of the 1933 Act, as appropriate. CE-FOPFs should consider whether these cumulative changes are material, which would require Division staff review of a post-effective amendment to the CE-FOPF’s registration statement under Rule 486(a).
Registrants that currently limit private fund exposure to 15% of assets and never imposed accredited investor and/or investment minimum shareholder limitations on their registration statements and now seek to remove the 15% limitation should file a post‑effective amendment filing pursuant to Rule 486(a), subject to Division staff review.
The ADI encourages registrants to consult with Division staff regarding appropriate filings and disclosures for CE-FOPFs.
Please contact us if you have any questions concerning this alert or would like assistance with preparing an update to your CE-FOPF registration statement.
[1] See Rule 501(a) of Regulation D under the 1933 Act for the definition of “accredited investor.”
[2] See, e.g., Rule 421(d) under the 1933 Act; see also, e.g., Rule 481 under the 1933 Act.





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