The SEC wants to “make IPOs great again,” and it believes that one path to doing so is easing reporting requirements for publicly listed companies. Last week, the SEC made official its much-anticipated proposal to permit public companies to report earnings semiannually. If adopted, companies will effectively have the option to trade three Form 10-Qs for a single semiannual Form 10-S.
For companies, this isn’t only about filing fewer earnings reports. It’s also about the impact on the proactive investor relations strategy, and what happens between filings: managing market expectations and establishing equity story narratives, maintaining analyst credibility and sustaining investor engagement, handling material nonpublic information (MNPI), and navigating insider trading windows.
The proposal, if approved, could create more volatility in an issuer’s share price, force investors to find alternative sources of information, and may not be the panacea some policymakers and corporate chieftains hope.
We game out three likely paths and their implications below.
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