On May 19th, the SEC proposed reforms intended to improve the efficiency, resilience, and cost‑effectiveness of registered offerings while remaining focused on providing strong investor protections. The proposal seeks to streamline the public‑company reporting framework and more closely align disclosure requirements with a company’s size and phase of development. The proposal is designed to respond to years of increasing regulatory complexity and a sustained drop in the number of public companies. By simplifying offerings and customizing disclosure requirements, the SEC aims to encourage more businesses, especially small and mid‑sized issuers, to go public and remain in the public markets.
The Registered Offering Reform proposal would introduce:
- broadened shelf‑offering eligibility for more public companies, enabling faster access to capital
- expanded use of communication and registration abilities currently only available to known, seasoned issuers
- enhanced broker‑dealer research coverage for a greater spectrum of companies
- preempted state securities registration for all registered offerings to decrease multi‑state compliance burdens
- maintained parity for Form N‑2 filers and expanded advertising options for certain insurance products
- simplified registration processes, including incorporation by reference into Form S‑1
The Enhancement of Emerging Growth Company Accommodations and Simplification of Filer Status for Reporting Companies proposal would:
- expand the simplified disclosure rules currently used by smaller and emerging growth companies, so they apply to about 81 percent of all public companies. New IPOs would be able to use these reduced requirements for no less than five years, allowing more time to adjust to public‑company reporting.
- create a subcategory of the smallest public companies that would receive extra time to file annual and periodic reports, easing reporting burden and lowering compliance costs. The additional time would be 30 days for Form 10‑K and 5 days for Form 10‑Q.
- boost large accelerated filer threshold from $700 million to $2 billion, creating a longer “IPO on‑ramp.”
- reclassify other public companies as non‑accelerated filers that would benefit from nearly all disclosure scaling and other accommodations now available to smaller and emerging companies.
For more information, please see the Registered Offering Reform rule proposal and the Enhancement of Emerging Growth Company Accommodations and Simplification of Filer Status for Reporting Companies rule proposal, both available on the SEC’s site.
The public may submit feedback during the comment period for both proposals, which will remain open for 60 days following its publication in the Federal Register.
Sources:
SEC Proposes Transformative Reforms to Help Public Companies Conduct Registered Offerings and Simplify Reporting Requirements (sec.gov)
Proposed Rule - Registered Offering Reform (sec.gov)
Proposed Rule - Enhancement of Emerging Growth Company Accommodations and Simplification of Filer Status for Reporting Companies (sec.gov)