As private fund advisers grow, many eventually cross the threshold from Exempt Reporting Adviser (ERA) to full SEC-registered investment adviser (RIA) status. While this transition is a positive indicator of business growth, it also introduces a significant shift in regulatory expectations, operational complexity, and compliance risk.
With increased SEC scrutiny of private fund advisers in recent years, firms should not view registration as a filing exercise, but rather as a fundamental evolution of their compliance framework.
This guide outlines when the transition is required, what triggers it, and how firms can prepare effectively.
When Does an ERA Need to Register?
Most ERAs rely on the private fund adviser exemption under Section 203(m) of the Investment Advisers Act. The key threshold:
Once an adviser meets or exceeds $150 million, it is no longer eligible to rely on ERA status and must transition to SEC registration.
Timing Considerations
Key takeaway: Waiting until you exceed $150M is too late, planning should begin 6–12 months in advance.
Step 1: Confirm Regulatory Status and Filing Strategy
Before initiating registration, firms should validate:
For most private fund advisers:
Step 2: Build a Scalable Compliance Program
Transitioning to SEC registration requires compliance with Rule 206(4)-7, which mandates a comprehensive compliance program.
This is often the largest gap for ERA firms.
Core Components to Implement
Common mistake: Repurposing generic templates without aligning to actual operations.
Step 3: Prepare Form ADV (Parts 1 and 2)
ERA firms are familiar with abbreviated ADV reporting but SEC registration requires significantly expanded disclosures.
Key Enhancements
Focus area: The SEC expects plain-English, accurate, and internally consistent disclosures, not boilerplate.
Step 4: Address the Marketing Rule
Many ERA firms operate informally with respect to investor communications. This is no longer sufficient under the SEC Marketing Rule (Rule 206(4)-1).
Required Enhancements
Key risk: Legacy pitch materials often fail to meet current regulatory standards.
Step 5: Implement Code of Ethics and Personal Trading Controls
SEC-registered advisers must comply with Rule 204A-1.
Requirements Include
For private fund advisers, policies should also address:
Step 6: Evaluate Custody and Financial Statement Obligations
Private fund advisers often trigger custody under the Advisers Act.
Common Scenarios
Compliance Path
Important: Custody implications must align across:
Step 7: Prepare for SEC Examination Readiness
Unlike ERA firms, SEC RIAs are subject to routine examinations.
Firms should expect scrutiny in areas such as:
Best Practice
Conduct a gap analysis prior to filing.
Step 8: Operationalize Compliance (Not Just Document It)
The most common failure point is not documentation, but execution.
Firms should ensure:
Regulatory expectation: If it is written in your policies, you must be able to demonstrate it in practice.
Final Thoughts: Treat Registration as a Strategic Milestone
Transitioning from ERA to SEC RIA is more than a regulatory requirement, it is a signal to investors, regulators, and counterparties that your firm has matured.
Firms that approach registration proactively rather than reactively benefit from:
How We Help
We work with private fund advisers to:
If your firm is approaching the $150M threshold or expects to in the next 12 months now is the time to start preparing.