The update directly addresses SEC reforms to registered offerings and public company reporting, which govern the issuance and trading of equity securities by public companies.
Mandatory inheritance: Equities as the primary tag requires Investment Services as the secondary tag, reflecting the asset-management and capital-markets dimension of equity offerings and public company disclosure.
Specialism
The SEC proposals directly address mandatory regulatory reporting requirements, disclosure scaling, and filing procedures for public companies, which are core Regulatory Reporting obligations.
Mandatory inheritance: Regulatory Reporting is a child of Supervision, so Supervision must be raised as the secondary tag.
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2026-05-20 08:31:38·ggallwey@vixio.com
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TITLE: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Proposes Registered Offering and Reporting Framework Reforms
BODY:
On May 19, 2026, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) proposed transformative amendments to its rules and forms governing registered offerings and public company reporting requirements. The proposals aim to increase efficiency, flexibility, and cost savings for public companies while maintaining investor protections.
The registered offering reform proposal represents the most significant modernization of the registered offering framework in more than 20 years. Under this proposal, a greater number of public companies would gain access to shelf offerings, enabling quicker capital market access regardless of public float size. More companies would utilize registration and offering communication flexibilities currently reserved for well-known seasoned issuers. Broker-dealers would provide research coverage to more public companies. State securities law registration requirements would be preempted for all registered offerings, reducing multi-state compliance costs. The SEC would also streamline other registration processes, including the ability to incorporate information by reference into Form S-1.
The filer status and emerging growth company accommodations reform would extend disclosure scaling and other accommodations to approximately 81 percent of current public companies. The SEC would raise the threshold for large accelerated filer status from $700 million to $2 billion in public float. New public companies would receive an "IPO on-ramp," maintaining accommodations for a minimum of five years post-listing regardless of public float. All non-accelerated filers would be exempt from auditor attestation requirements on internal control over financial reporting. Small non-accelerated filers would receive additional time to file annual and quarterly reports.
The comment period for both proposals remains open for 60 days following publication in the Federal Register. The SEC stated these reforms aim to incentivize companies, particularly small and mid-sized firms, to go and stay public.
SEC.gov | SEC Proposes Transformative Reforms to Help Public Companies Conduct Registered Offerings and Simplify Reporting Requirements Skip to search field Skip to main content Official websites use .gov A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States. Secure .gov websites use HTTPS A lock ( Lock A locked padlock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites. More in this Section Press Release SEC Proposes Transformative Reforms to Help Public Companies Conduct Registered Offerings and Simplify Reporting Requirements For Immediate Release 2026-46 Washington D.C., May 19, 2026 — The Securities and Exchange Commission today proposed amendments to its rules and forms governing registered offerings that are designed to increase efficiency, flexibility, and cost savings for public companies while maintaining robust investor protections. The Commission also proposed rule amendments to simplify its public company reporting framework and better calibrate disclosure obligations with a company's size and maturity. The United States’ dynamic public securities markets offer benefits to issuers and investors alike. Issuers can raise capital through the public markets on more favorable terms as compared to private markets, and investors benefit from the increased transparency and liquidity provided by the public markets. Compounding regulatory requirements over recent decades, however, have corresponded with a decrease in the number of public companies. The proposed amendments – together with the recently proposed optionality for semiannual interim reporting and other forthcoming rule proposals – represent important steps toward incentivizing companies to go and stay public. “Today, the Commission proposed two rulemakings that serve as the foundation for my agenda to Make IPOs Great Again. These proposals build upon the legislative and regulatory concepts that have proven successful in the past and aim to extend that success to more companies – particularly small and mid-sized companies – and incentivize them to go and stay public,” said SEC Chairman Paul S. Atkins in a statement . “Today’s proposed rulemakings are among the first important steps toward transforming the SEC’s regulatory framework for public companies.” Registered Offering Reform The registered offering reform proposal, if adopted, would be the most significant modernization of the registered offering framework in more than 20 years. Under the proposal: A greater number of public companies would be able to conduct shelf offerings, which allow quicker access to the public capital markets, regardless of the company’s public float. More public companies would be able to utilize certain registration and offering communication flexibilities that currently are reserved for companies with a large public float defined as “well-known seasoned issuers.” Broker-dealers would be able to provide research report coverage for a greater number of public companies. State securities law registration and qualification requirements would be preempted for all registered offerings, which would mitigate the costs and complexity of conducting a multi-state registered offering. Parity between certain Form N-2 filers and operating companies across registration, offering, and communication provisions would be maintained, and access to broad-based advertising for certain non-variable annuity insurance products would be expanded. Other aspects of the registration process would be streamlined, such as the ability to incorporate information by reference into Form S-1. Filer Status and Emerging Growth Company Accommodations Reform The proposed amendments would extend disclosure scaling and other accommodations currently utilized by smaller or emerging companies to approximately 81 percent of all current public companies. New public companies would enjoy these accommodations for a minimum of five years. The smallest public companies also would have additional time to file their annual and other periodic reports. The proposed rule amendments notably would raise the threshold for a public company to become a large accelerated filer from $700 million to $2 billion. A company would not become a large accelerated filer for at least 60 months following its IPO regardless of its public float, effectively providing it an "IPO on-ramp" to stabilize and grow while benefiting from disclosure scaling and other accommodations. All other public companies would be categorized as non-accelerated filers and would benefit from nearly all disclosure scaling and other accommodations currently available to smaller and emerging companies. All non-accelerated filers would also be exempt from the requirement to obtain an auditor's attestation on their internal control over financial reporting. In addition, the proposed rules would establish a subcategory of small non-accelerated filers that would receive an additional 30 days to file their Form 10-K annual reports and an additional five days to file their Form 10-Q quarterly reports. This change is intended to meaningfully reduce the reporting costs for this category of companies, which represent the smallest 18 percent of public companies by assets. The public comment period for both proposals will remain open for 60 days following publication of the proposing releases in the Federal Register. ### Last Reviewed or Updated: May 19, 2026 Resources Proposed Rule - Registered Offering Reform Fact Sheet - Registered Offering Reform Proposed Rule - Public Company Reporting Framework Fact Sheet - Public Company Reporting Framework Chairman Atkins Statement