SEC.gov | SEC Proposes Transformative Reforms to Help Public Companies Conduct Registered Offerings and Simplify Reporting Requirements

https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2026-46-sec-proposes-transformative-reforms-help-public-companies-conduct-registered-offerings-simplify
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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.
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