A key committee at FIFA is expected to approve a series of proposals on Wednesday that would seek to reform the multibillion-dollar player transfer market by limiting the influence of the sport’s biggest agents and also prevent clubs like Chelsea, Juventus and Manchester City from stockpiling talent.

Some of the conclusions of FIFA’s player status committee, which would approve the changes, mirror those in an internal FIFA report, created last year at the behest of the organization’s president, Gianni Infantino. Infantino has pledged to try and tame a transfer industry that has turned a small group of powerful agents into some of the most influential figures in soccer, and allowed a group of wealthy clubs to hoard and profit from large stables of players who are unlikely to ever play for their parent teams.

Infantino, a former official at European soccer’s governing body who has long been frustrated by the opacity in the player trading industry, vowed to act after details of huge commissions extracted by a select group of player agents were revealed in the leak of confidential documents by the Football Leaks platform in 2015. In one case, the Italian-Dutch agent Mino Raiola reportedly earned more than 40 million euros after he was paid by all three parties in midfielder Paul Pogba’s world-record transfer from Juventus to Manchester United in 2016.

According to details of the FIFA proposals, which were explained by two people familiar with them who were not authorized to discuss the proposals publicly, individuals no longer will be able to act for the interests of buying and selling clubs in the same transaction, and agent commissions will be capped at 3 percent for buying clubs and players, and 6 percent for selling teams.