
Plenty of alternative investment firms wander into introducing broker territory without ever deciding to. A fund manager starts soliciting orders for a futures strategy, a forex affiliate routes client accounts to a dealer, or a derivatives platform earns a fee for bringing in order flow, and at some point, the activity crosses into a role the National Futures Association expects to be registered and supervised.
But all things considered, the real exposure for leadership isn’t the label but what follows it: misclassifying the activity, underestimating what the NFA requires, and treating registration as a one-time filing rather than an ongoing program.
Time to get the fundamentals right.
The NFA defines an introducing broker, or IB, as a person or organization that solicits or accepts orders for futures, forex, commodity options, or swaps without accepting customer money or assets to support those orders. In practice, an IB is the registered intermediary that brings customer order flow to a futures commission merchant (FCM) or retail foreign exchange dealer (RFED): it can own the customer relationship, solicit accounts, and introduce clients, but it never holds customer funds for margin or trade support. Those accounts stay with the FCM or RFED on a fully disclosed basis.
An IB is defined by activity, not branding, so a firm compensated for soliciting or accepting orders in commodity interests may owe registration regardless of what it calls itself. Three nearby roles are the easiest to confuse with:
Because the categories overlap, one firm can sit in several at once. A hedge fund, crypto derivatives strategy, managed-account business, or offshore structure with U.S. commodity interest activity may already host an IB role alongside its CPO, CTA, or broker-dealer registrations, all run through the NFA.
An introducing broker’s NFA obligations extend well past initial registration. Leadership needs to think in terms of structure, capital, reporting, supervision, AML, communications, records, cybersecurity, and exam readiness.
Becoming an IB and an NFA member starts with naming a security manager, completing Form 7-R, submitting the membership application, satisfying the applicant compliance requirements, finishing the member questionnaire, and paying the application and membership fees. The firm then files Form 8-R for its principals and associated persons, submits fingerprints, meets proficiency requirements, and keeps at least one principal who also serves as an associated person.
An IB operates as either independent or guaranteed, and that choice shapes much of what follows. An independent IB clears through one or more FCMs or RFEDs and carries its own capital and financial reporting obligations. A guaranteed IB works under a guarantee agreement with a single FCM or RFED that takes on liability for the IB’s acts and omissions and carries its customer accounts.
Independent IBs have to keep adjusted net capital at or above the required floor. NFA Financial Requirements Section 5 sets that floor at the greatest of $45,000, $6,000 per office, $3,000 per associated person for firms with less than $1 million in adjusted net capital, or the applicable broker-dealer amount. Those firms also keep accounting records under U.S. GAAP on an accrual basis and file their financial reports electronically.
Both FCMs and IBs must maintain a written anti-money laundering program. At a minimum, the NFA expects internal policies and controls, a designated compliance officer, ongoing training, an independent audit, and risk-based customer due diligence that includes customer risk profiles, suspicious activity monitoring, and beneficial owner information.
NFA Compliance Rule 2-9 requires FCM, IB, CPO, and CTA members to diligently supervise their employees and agents in commodity interest activity. In practice, an IB needs written procedures, trained personnel, branch office oversight, associated person supervision, ethics training, and controls sized to its business model. The annual requirements go further, calling for supervision of every branch office and an on-site inspection of each one.
NFA Compliance Rule 2-29 governs promotional material and communications with the public. An IB has to steer clear of deceptive messaging, misleading performance claims, high-pressure sales tactics, unsupported opinions, and the improper use of hypothetical results. The rule also calls for written supervisory procedures and, in some cases, preapproval submissions at least 10 days before first use.
NFA members keep the records behind their activity for five years, with the most recent two readily accessible. An IB also completes the NFA’s annual self-examination questionnaire, holds signed attestations, reviews its cybersecurity program, trains employees, tests its disaster recovery plan, updates the member questionnaire, and files the required financial and cyber notices through NFA systems.
Firms touching crypto or other digital asset commodity activity pick up NFA Rule 2-51, which layers on anti-fraud provisions, just and equitable principles of trade, and added supervision requirements. It applies when the activity involves a digital asset commodity tied to a related commodity interest product that a registered entity has certified or the CFTC has approved for listing.
At the end of the day, an IB program is a set of obligations that all stay live at once, usually while you’re running the business. That’s the load we take off your desk. Michael Coglianese CPA, P.C. has worked with alternative funds for more than 35 years, staffed by former NFA and SEC regulators and Big Four alums who’ve run exams from the other side, with the certified audits and partnership tax an IB needs. Five places we do the most good for an introducing broker:
An introducing broker can be a useful piece of a futures, derivatives, forex, or commodity strategy business, as long as the NFA obligations behind it are built in from the start. All of it belongs in the design, not the cleanup.
If your firm is forming, operating, or rethinking an introducing broker structure, reach out to talk through your NFA compliance obligations. We’d rather help you build a strong foundation now than untangle a deficiency later.



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Lincolnshire Office
Michael Coglianese
CPA, P.C. ​
300 Tri State
International
Suite 180
Lincolnshire, Il. 60069
​
630.351.4005
info@cogcpa.com