Go to integrated search
contact us

Copyright SJKP LLP Law Firm all rights reserved

Private Investment Funds: Formation, Compliance, and Investor Terms



Private investment funds pool capital from a limited group of qualified investors to invest in strategies like private equity, venture capital, hedge funds, and real estate.

Setting up private investment funds means getting the structure, securities exemptions, adviser registration, and investor terms right from the start. Small missteps in fund formation or compliance can create liability that lasts the entire life of the fund.


1. What Is a Private Investment Fund, and How Is It Built?


A private fund looks simple from the outside, a pool of money managed by professionals, but the legal architecture underneath is deliberate and layered.

Each layer serves a purpose, from liability protection to tax efficiency.

Getting that architecture right at formation is far easier than fixing it once investors are in.



What a Private Investment Fund Is


A private investment fund is a pooled vehicle that raises capital privately from a limited group of eligible investors rather than the general public.

It differs from a mutual fund because it is not registered as a public investment company and is sold only through private channels. The category spans private equity, venture capital, hedge funds, private credit, and real estate funds, each with its own strategy and liquidity profile. What they share is a private offering to sophisticated investors under specific legal exemptions. That private nature is exactly what shapes the rules that follow.



How the Structure Works: Gp, Lp, and Management Compan


Most private funds use a limited partnership with a general partner that manages it and limited partners who provide the capital.

The fund itself, often a limited partnership or LLC, holds and invests the money, while a separate management company employs the team and receives the management fee. The general partner makes investment decisions and earns carried interest, and the limited partnership agreement, or LPA, governs everyone's rights. This separation into distinct entities, similar to what a careful limited liability company agreement sets up, allocates control, liability, and economics. The table shows who does what.

PartyRoleTypical Interest
Limited partners (LPs)Provide capital and stay passiveReturns on their investment
General partner (GP)Manages the fund and its decisionsCarried interest
Management companyRuns operations and employs the teamManagement fee
The fund (LP or LLC)Holds and invests the capitalThe investment vehicle itself


2. Do Private Funds Have to Register with the Sec?


The defining feature of a private fund is that it avoids the full registration a public fund faces. But avoiding registration is not the same as avoiding regulation.

Two separate exemption questions arise: one for the fund, and one for the people who manage it.



The Exemptions That Keep a Fund Private


Private funds stay unregistered by selling interests privately and fitting within exclusions from the Investment Company Act.

Private funds commonly rely on Rule 506(b) or Rule 506(c) of Regulation D. Rule 506(b) generally avoids general solicitation, while Rule 506(c) permits general solicitation only if the issuer takes reasonable steps to verify accredited investor status.

The fund itself then relies on an exclusion under the Investment Company Act of 1940, either Section 3(c)(1), which limits it to no more than 100 beneficial owners, or Section 3(c)(7), which requires all investors to be qualified purchasers.

The 100-owner limit requires careful counting, because knowledgeable employees, entity investors, look-through rules, and certain venture capital fund exceptions can affect the analysis, and a qualified purchaser is a higher standard than an accredited investor, so a 3(c)(7) fund must verify eligibility separately. These choices connect to broader securities regulations compliance.



When the Manager Must Register As an Adviser


The fund manager is an investment adviser, so it must either register with the SEC or qualify for an exemption.

Under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, a U.S. .dviser that advises only private funds and has less than $150 million in private fund assets under management may qualify for the private fund adviser exemption, while larger advisers often need SEC registration unless another exemption applies.

Registration brings duties including Form ADV filing, the custody rule for client assets, the marketing rule for how the fund is promoted, and a fiduciary duty to clients, all central to sound investment advisory practice, and depending on assets and fund type an adviser may also have Form PF reporting obligations. Regulators continue to scrutinize private fund advisers through examinations and enforcement, but the SEC's 2023 Private Fund Adviser Rules were vacated by the Fifth Circuit in 2024, so advisers should distinguish existing Advisers Act obligations from rules that are no longer in force. Getting the adviser's status right is as important as structuring the fund.



3. What Terms Define the Fund and Protect Investors?


Beyond structure and regulation, a private fund lives or dies by its terms. The economics decide who profits, and the governance terms decide who has a say.

Both are negotiated heavily, especially between a fund sponsor and its larger investors.



The Economics: Fees, Carry, and the Waterfall


A private fund's economics center on a management fee, carried interest, and the order in which profits are distributed.

The management company typically charges an annual management fee, while the general partner earns carried interest as a share of profits, often above a hurdle or preferred return that investors receive first. A clawback can require the GP to return excess carry, and capital is drawn through capital calls and returned through a distribution waterfall. These terms are where sponsors and investors negotiate hardest, and venture capital compliance issues often surface here. The table outlines the core economic terms.

TermWhat It IsTypical Purpose
Management feeAnnual fee on committed or invested capitalFunds fund operations
Carried interestThe GP's share of profitsRewards performance
Hurdle or preferred returnReturn LPs receive before carryProtects investors
ClawbackReturn of excess carry to LPsCorrects overpayment
Distribution waterfallThe order profits are paid outAllocates returns fairly


What Protects the Limited Partners


Limited partners rely on the LPA and negotiated terms to protect capital they cannot manage directly.

Key protections include a key person clause tied to the managers investors are backing, provisions to remove the GP for cause or without fault, and a limited partner advisory committee that reviews conflicts. Larger investors often negotiate side letters, which should be tracked carefully because preferential terms, most-favored-nation rights, fee breaks, and reporting or liquidity rights can create disclosure and conflict issues across investors. Hedge funds add lock-ups, redemption gates, and reporting obligations, issues that surface in private equity disputes when they are unclear. If you are an investor, negotiate these protections before committing capital, not after a problem appears.



4. What Are the Risks, and When Do You Need a Lawyer?


Private funds face a distinct set of legal risks that grow as assets and investors increase. Regulators pay close attention to how managers handle other people's money.

Anticipating these risks is far cheaper than defending an examination or a dispute later.



Where Private Funds Run into Trouble


Most private fund problems trace back to conflicts of interest, fees and expenses, valuation, and marketing.

SEC examinations frequently focus on whether expenses were properly allocated, whether valuations were reasonable, whether marketing and performance claims were accurate, and whether conflicts were disclosed.

Valuation policies in particular should specify the methodology, the responsible personnel, the use of third-party marks, conflict controls, and documentation for hard-to-value assets. Private funds collectively manage trillions of dollars, which is one reason they draw sustained regulatory attention. Strong disclosure and documented processes are the best protection against both examinations and litigation.



Fund Formation and Getting Counsel


Launching a private fund requires a coordinated set of documents and decisions that a template cannot handle.

Formation typically involves a private placement memorandum, the limited partnership agreement, a subscription agreement, and a Form D filing, and state blue sky notice filings and investor-eligibility certifications should be coordinated with that Form D and subscription process.

There are also decisions about onshore or offshore structure and tax treatment, each of which has to align with the chosen exemptions and the adviser's registration status. Because the pieces interlock, an error in one document can undermine the others. If you are forming a fund or investing significant capital, work with counsel to structure the entity, exemptions, economics, and offering documents together.



5. Key Questions on Forming and Investing in Private Funds


Sponsors and investors tend to raise the same core issues before capital is committed.



Do Private Investment Funds Have to Register with the Sec?


Usually not as public investment companies, if they qualify for an exclusion such as Section 3(c)(1) or 3(c)(7) of the Investment Company Act and sell interests privately under Regulation D. However, the fund's manager may still have to register as an investment adviser or file as an exempt reporting adviser, depending on its assets and clients.



Who Can Invest in a Private Investment Fund?


Investors generally must be accredited investors, and for a 3(c)(7) fund, qualified purchasers who meet higher investment thresholds. These eligibility rules exist because private funds are sold under exemptions meant for sophisticated investors. The specific requirements depend on which securities and Investment Company Act exemptions the fund relies on.



What Is the Difference between a 3(C)(1) and a 3(C)(7) Fund?


A 3(c)(1) fund is limited to no more than 100 beneficial owners, while a 3(c)(7) fund can have more investors but requires all of them to be qualified purchasers. A qualified purchaser is a higher standard than an accredited investor, so a 3(c)(7) fund must verify that stronger eligibility separately rather than assuming accreditation is enough.



How Are Fund Managers Paid?


Through two main components: a management fee and carried interest. The management fee is an annual charge that funds operations, and carried interest is the general partner's share of profits, usually paid only after investors receive their capital back and a preferred return. Clawback provisions can require the return of excess carry.



Does a Fund Manager Have to Register As an Investment Adviser?


Often yes, unless an exemption applies. A U.S. .dviser managing only private funds with less than $150 million in those assets may qualify for the private fund adviser exemption, while larger advisers generally register with the SEC. Registration brings duties like Form ADV and possibly Form PF filing, the custody rule, the marketing rule, and a fiduciary obligation.



What Documents Are Needed to Launch a Private Fund?


A typical launch involves a private placement memorandum that discloses the strategy and risks, a limited partnership agreement governing the fund, a subscription agreement for investors, a Form D filing, and state blue sky notices. Side letters and adviser registration filings may follow. These documents must align with each other



What Protections Do Limited Partners Have?


Protections come from the limited partnership agreement and negotiated terms, including key person clauses, GP removal rights, a limited partner advisory committee, reporting obligations, and, in hedge funds, redemption rights subject to lock-ups. Larger investors may negotiate side letters. Clear terms on fees, expenses, conflicts, and valuation are among the most important protections.



Do I Need a Lawyer to Form a Private Investment Fund?


Yes, for anything beyond the simplest structure. Fund formation combines securities exemptions, adviser registration, tax structuring, and heavily negotiated economics that a generic template cannot address. Experienced counsel can align the entity, exemptions, offering documents, and investor terms so the fund launches on a compliant footing.


31 Dec, 2025


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

Online Consultation
Phone Consultation