Federal News
Senators Expand Capital Access for Small Businesses
March 20, 2026
Senators Ruben Gallego and Mike Rounds have introduced bipartisan legislation, the Small Business Investor Capital Access Act, to modernize federal securities regulations by increasing the SEC registration exemption threshold for private fund advisers from $150 million to $175 million, with automatic inflation adjustments every five years. This legislative change aims to reduce compliance costs for small investment funds, enabling them to allocate more capital to small businesses and entrepreneurs, particularly in underserved, rural, and minority communities. The modernization addresses regulatory burdens that currently limit smaller funds' ability to support startups and local job creation.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals and contractors should note that easing regulatory barriers for small investment funds can increase available capital for small business growth, potentially expanding the pool of qualified vendors and subcontractors.
- The legislation signals a federal focus on supporting small business financing, which may influence future procurement strategies emphasizing supplier diversity and economic development.
- Organizations involved in investment advisory or financial services should evaluate how the updated thresholds and inflation indexing affect compliance requirements and market opportunities.
- This development may encourage increased participation of small businesses in government contracting by improving their access to capital and investment resources.
For too many small business owners, securing financing is still the hardest part of getting a business off the ground 6 and the problem runs deepest in communities that traditional lenders have long overlooked. Small investment funds can fill that gap, but right now they are forced to spend time and money following the same expensive compliance rules as massive Wall Street firms. That mismatch means these small funds have less capital to put towards startups and small businesses.
— Senator Ruben Gallego
Small businesses are the backbone of our economy, but too often they struggle to access the capital needed to expand and create jobs. This legislation removes unnecessary regulatory barriers that prevent small investment funds from directing capital to innovative startups and entrepreneurs, particularly in rural communities like many across South Dakota.
— Senator Mike Rounds
This is a smart and necessary modernization of outdated regulation. Their strong support underscores the importance of aligning regulatory thresholds with economic reality. This bill will reduce compliance costs for smaller funds and allow more capital to flow to Americas small businesses.
— Brett Palmer, President of Small Business Investor Alliance
Agencies
United States Senate, United States House of Representatives, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, House Financial Services Committee
Locations
Sources
- Gallego Introduces Bipartisan Legislation to Expand Access to Capital for Small Businesses · Gallego Senate · Mar 20
- Rounds Introduces Legislation to Expand ... | U.S. Senator Mike Rounds · Rounds Senate · Mar 20