Overview
The regulatory framework governing the intersection of derivatives markets and the private fund industry has reached a pivotal inflection point. On December 19, 2025, the Market Participants Division of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued no-action relief that effectively restores the CFTC Rule 4.13(a)(4) commodity pool operator (CPO) exemption, which was rescinded in 2012. Rulemaking to restore the exemption may follow, but the no-action relief is immediately applicable.
Many private fund managers will be able to rely on the restored exemption, including managers who registered with the CFTC after the exemption was rescinded and managers who have been relying on the de minimis exemption.
In Depth
Historical context
Rule 4.13(a)(4) was initially established in 2003 and grounded in the realization that US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) registered investment advisers (RIAs) were already subject to a comprehensive regulatory regime under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. Unlike Rule 4.13(a)(3), Rule 4.13(a)(4) was conditioned on who the fund is being sold to rather than on the specific instruments being utilized. Rule 4.13(a)(4) was only available to RIAs of private funds that limited its offering to qualified eligible persons (QEP).[1] RIAs to registered investment companies (Registered Funds) had an analogous blanket exemption provided by CFTC Rule 4.5.[2]
As part of a series of Dodd-Frank-related rulemakings in 2012, Rule 4.13(a)(4) was rescinded and a de minimis component was added to Rule 4.5.[3] The impact of those recissions was as follows:
- Private funds. Most private fund managers who utilized any derivatives faced a choice of either limiting their CFTC-regulated derivatives trading to comply with one of the de minimis thresholds provided by Rule 4.13(a)(3)[4] or registering with the CFTC as a CPO and utilizing the post-registration Rule 4.7 relief.[5]
- Registered funds. The addition of the de minimis component gave Registered Fund managers a similar choice: remain exempt by complying with one of the de minimis thresholds under Rule 4.5 or register as a CPO and rely on post-registration Rule 4.12(c) relief.
Other vehicles. Some (perhaps unintended) consequences of the recission were various entities that were primarily subject to other regulatory regimes but had historically relied on Rule 4.13(a)(4). The CFTC issued several relief letters and rulemakings to remedy those situations.[6] Similarly, CFTC staff issued no-action relief to fund of funds (FOF), given Rule 4.13(a)(3)’s incompatibility with them.
Staff relief
Relief conditions
In what is framed as an interim solution, CFTC staff issued no-action relief that provides a Rule 4.13(a)(4)-analogous “bridge” exemption (4.13(a)(4) Relief) until the CFTC can formally reinstate the rule. The 4.13(a)(4) Relief is available to a CPO that (i) is an RIA, (ii) operates a commodity pool that is offered on a private placement basis (e.g., Regulation D offering),[7] and (iii) reasonably believes at the time of investment[8] that each pool participant meets the QEP definition. CFTC staff also conditioned the relief on the CPO filing Form PF with the SEC with respect to such pool, as well as complying with several other Rule 4.13 components, all of which an exempt or registered CPO that is an RIA would already be subject to.[9] Unlike Rule 4.13 exemptions, which are claimed on NFA’s website, 4.13(a)(4) Relief is claimed by submitting an email to CFTC staff.[10]
Additional components
Generally, a CPO that intends to “step down” from registration (e.g., reliance on Rule 4.7) to a Rule 4.13 exemption is required by Rule 4.13 to first offer investors the right to redeem; the 4.13(a)(4) Relief also provides relief from such requirements.[11]
Finally, CFTC staff confirmed that this relief extends to the Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) Rule 4.14(a)(5) exemption as well (i.e., a CPO relying on the 4.13(a)(4) Relief is also eligible to rely on Rule 4.14(a)(5) with respect to such pool).[12]
Next steps
The impact of this letter will vary:
- Registered CPOs looking to utilize the 4.13(a)(4) Relief can consider two approaches: fully deregistering with the CFTC and relying on the 4.13(a)(4) Relief or transitioning to the 4.13(a)(4) Relief while remaining registered.[13] CPOs considering the utilization of the 13(a)(4) Relief should nonetheless consider the appropriate deregistration timeline. Such CPOs should also confirm whether there are any contractual obligations to provide notification or receive consent from clients before changing CFTC status or any other client sensitivities.
- Exempt CPOs can also consider whether to transition from the more restrictive Rule 4.13(a)(3) to this new exemption.
- Managers of vehicles that are utilizing one of the CFTC no-action letters described above (e.g., securitization vehicles, real estate investment trusts (REITs)) should consider whether transitioning to 4.13(a)(4) Relief would provide more flexibility. Similarly, FOF managers relying on the 12-38 relief and non-US managers relying on Rule 3.10(c)(5)[14] may also find that the 4.13(a)(4) Relief provides greater flexibility.
- Institutional investors such as family offices, pension plans, and FOF should consider whether the change in CFTC status of the commodity pools they are invested in has any downstream impact. RIAs to 3(c)(7) funds[15] have an easy path to satisfying the investor suitability component of the 4.13(a)(4) Relief as all of its investors most likely already qualify as QEPs.[16] Other private fund managers (e.g., operating funds that rely on Section 3(c)(1)) should consider whether all of its investors meet the QEP conditions. (Note that the CFTC recently raised the QEP monetary thresholds.)[17]
While the relief can be highly useful for most managers, there are certain managers that may be unable to utilize it. Specifically, advisers that are not RIAs (e.g., non-US advisers that are exempt reporting advisers). Additionally, while both private funds and Registered Funds were similarly impacted by the 2012 rule changes (the recission of Rule 4.13(a)(4) and amendments to Rule 4.5, respectively), this relief only addresses private fund managers. Advisers to Registered Funds and certain business development companies continue to be limited to relying on a de minimis exemption or registering. Finally, CTAs to non-pool clients may have more limited relief available, relative to CTAs of commodity pool clients relying on the 4.13(a)(4) Relief.
This action represents a significant departure from the post-2012 regulatory status quo and signals a broader institutional shift toward reducing duplicative oversight. Increased coordination between the two agencies is particularly welcome with the implementation of a full crypto-asset regulatory framework expected. Nonetheless, while this development offers a substantial opportunity to streamline compliance programs, managers should carefully consider various factors before utilizing the 4.13(a)(4) Relief, including the lack of certainty regarding a permanent solution, the impact of any future associated rulemakings, and potential downstream contractual or operational commitments. While reliance on the exemption may certainly be feasible for many managers, given these complexities, a thorough, case-by-case evaluation is recommended before proceeding.