Jul 16, 2026
US regulators are pushing activist hedge funds to name their financial backers, a shift that could expose Gulf family offices quietly participating in American markets. The Securities and Exchange Commission now requires activist investors to list their clients in official filings, potentially unsettling funds that have long resisted such transparency.
Last week, the SEC issued updated guidance on 13D filings and proxy statements, clarifying its stance after six months of intense activist activity. For the Gulf region, where private family offices have steadily increased their North American market involvement, the consequences extend far beyond Wall Street.
The SEC oversees US financial markets to enforce compliance. A key focus has been activist investing, where funds acquire significant stakes to push for changes like cost reductions, leadership shifts, or company sales. A common tool, the special purpose vehicle, lets outside investors support campaigns anonymously. That option may now vanish.
Consider a Gulf family office that learns an activist fund plans to target a major US firm for a sale or CEO replacement. Instead of investing broadly, the office backs that single campaign, takes profits if successful, and exits. Until recently, this could stay private. No longer.
Prominent activists like Elliott Management, Carl Icahn, and Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square have transformed global companies through high-profile efforts, from pushing Twitter’s board to remove Jack Dorsey in 2021 to forcing BHP Billiton into a major restructuring. These examples highlight the influence such funds hold—and why their backers have fiercely guarded their anonymity.
Mohammed Soliman, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, noted that the SEC has effectively ended the longstanding practice of hiding investor identities in these targeted vehicles. The change broadly mandates more transparency in proxy contests and filings, without targeting any specific capital type.
Ben Charoenwong, an associate finance professor at Insead in Singapore, warned against viewing the guidance as final. He told The National that this is staff guidance, not a new rule, issued without consultation or a public comment period. A formal rule would require over a year of comment letters and potential court battles. The same staff could quietly reverse this guidance next year.
According to UBS‘s Global Family Office Report 2026, North America holds 50 percent of Middle Eastern family office portfolios, the largest regional share. Ocorian reports that younger Gulf heirs are shifting family wealth toward sophisticated global strategies, including private equity co-investments and alternative assets. Sixty-eight percent of Middle Eastern family offices say the next generation is more involved in investment strategy, focusing on digital assets and alternatives—exactly the areas that bring Gulf capital closer to the co-investment structures now targeted by the SEC.
The total Gulf private family office capital in the US is not publicly tracked, making this policy reinterpretation noteworthy. Some of that hidden money may now have to reveal itself.
Peter Unwin, head of private wealth and family office at IQ-EQ, explained why Gulf investors favor these structures. They use activist vehicles to gain more influence over outcomes rather than waiting for management improvements. These vehicles align with family offices’ longer-term strategies, unlike portfolio managers seeking short-term gains. This approach lets them act like private equity investors while staying in public markets.
For sovereign funds like Mubadala, Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, and Qatar Investment Authority, the direct impact is limited. Rachel Ziemba, founder of Ziemba Insights, noted that Gulf institutional investors are generally less involved in activist campaigns than others. They prefer investing in companies whose management they trust, rather than using leverage to force change.
The situation differs for Gulf family offices and private investors. Charoenwong said the rule primarily affects deal-specific structures, single-company SPVs, and co-investments. Being permanently named on a US filing as foreign money behind a campaign to break up an American company carries political costs both at home and in Washington, and undermines the privacy they previously enjoyed.
Soliman highlighted that exposure is especially acute when private wealth is close to state power. For Gulf family offices and private investors, where personal wealth and state interests can overlap, new disclosure obligations add a layer of exposure. Publicly identifying backers in activist campaigns could attract unwanted political or media scrutiny in the US.
Ziemba cautioned against overstating the guidance’s significance. She said the move does not make the US more complicated or difficult for Gulf investors. Many of these frictions have existed for some time. The US remains a complex market but attracts substantial Gulf capital due to its size, depth, and role in funding technology and key supply chains.
Charoenwong expects sophisticated investors to respond structurally rather than withdraw from US markets. Sophisticated money does not abandon a strategy due to tighter disclosure; it shifts into the wrapper that reveals the least. He added that investors can return to blending with larger funds and avoid joining anything that names them as co-bidders.

