By Svea Herbst-Bayliss
NEW YORK, July 10 (Reuters) – Activist investors in the U.S. must disclose the identities of their clients in regulatory filings, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a move that may rattle hedge funds āby requesting information they have long fought to keep secret.
The updated interpretations on 13D filings and proxy statements, āissued by the main U.S. securities regulator on Thursday, had not been expected and have not been widely reported, according to lawyers who work on investor activism, āwho spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the matter openly.
The SEC’s new guidance on its Corporate Finance Interpretations clarifies how the agency views its rules on critical filings after a busy six months of activist campaigns.
The regulator did not respond to a request for comment on the changes or say what prompted it to issue the interpretation now.
The changes signal increased interest in transparency about what investors āpushing for boardroom changes or other matters ā must say about their clients, the legal advisers said. The changes come as special purpose vehicles called “sidecars” are increasingly used to finance activist campaigns.
“The identities of the investors in an entity formed for ā the purpose of acquiring securities of a specific issuer and engaging in an activism campaign at that issuer must be disclosed,” the SEC writes in answer to Question 110.09.
The answer to Question 155.02, which asks whether clients are considered “participants” in a limited partnership that aims to solicit āvotes āto change board directors, is “yes” if these clients invested more than $500.
BUOYANT ACTIVISM
In āthe first half of 2026, investors including Elliott āInvestment Management, Ancora Alternatives and TOMS Capital Investment Management have pushed companies ranging from media giant Warner Bros Discovery to Devon Energy to perform better.
In a particularly competitive part of financial markets, hedge funds have long prized secrecy around the identity of their investors. They argue that identifying anything about their business, including who is funding them, could embolden copycats and limit their ability to make money.
As hedge funds race to gather assets, more are relying on special purpose vehicles where potential investors are often told āabout the firm’s strategy and the target company’s name. It allows clients āto make investments in specific companies, rather than be in a hedge fund’s ābigger pool of investments.
But companies targeted by corporate activists āsay greater transparency, including knowing who is invested, is necessary information to defend themselves.
The SEC’s interpretation will āremind companies and hedge funds of 2022, when medical ādevice company Masimo Corp, facing āa fight with Politan Capital, amended its bylaws to force any activist planning to nominate directors to disclose the identities of the fund’s limited partners and reveal future plans to nominate candidates elsewhere.
The Masimo bylaws sparked outrage among seasoned āactivist investors. And while few companies followed āMasimo’s lead, hundreds of corporations contacted their lawyers to ask whether they too should adopt such bylaws, attorneys āsaid.
In early 2023 Masimo reversed course and stopped requiring hedge funds to detail this information. In 2026 it āwas purchased by Danaher.
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by William Mallard)
