The number of publicly traded companies in the US has dropped by nearly 40% over the past three decades. The SEC just decided that’s a problem worth fixing.
On May 19, the Securities and Exchange Commission proposed sweeping amendments to the rules governing registered offerings and periodic reporting. It’s the most significant overhaul of these frameworks in over 20 years, and it’s squarely aimed at making the IPO process less painful for companies that have been avoiding public markets.
What’s actually changing
The proposed rules would nearly triple the threshold for what qualifies as a “large accelerated filer,” raising it from $700 million to $2 billion in public float. A much larger pool of companies would qualify for lighter-touch reporting requirements that were previously reserved for the biggest players in the market.
The SEC also wants to extend benefits that currently belong exclusively to well-known seasoned issuers, or WKSIs, to a broader set of companies. WKSIs get access to shelf registration, which lets them issue securities quickly without going through the full approval process each time, and communication safe harbors that shield them from liability for certain public statements during offerings.
Under the new proposals, two new categories of issuers, dubbed “Eligible Listed Issuers” and “Seasoned Eligible Listed Issuers,” would gain access to similar perks. That’s a meaningful shift for mid-cap companies that currently sit in regulatory no-man’s-land: too big to qualify for emerging growth company exemptions, too small to enjoy WKSI privileges.
Perhaps the most eyebrow-raising element is a proposed new Form 10-S, which would allow reporting companies to file semiannual reports instead of the traditional quarterly Form 10-Q. This would be optional, not mandatory.
Why the SEC is doing this now
The timing traces directly to SEC Chairman Atkins’s strategic agenda of reducing regulatory burdens on capital formation. SEC officials have been careful to emphasize that the proposed changes would not compromise investor protections, framing the effort as a recalibration rather than a rollback.
Comments on the semiannual reporting proposals are due by July 6, 2026.
What this means for investors
These are proposed changes, not final rules. The comment period, potential revisions, and implementation timeline mean markets won’t feel the effects for months at minimum.
The optional semiannual reporting is worth watching closely. On one hand, less frequent reporting could attract companies that view quarterly earnings as a distraction from long-term strategy. On the other hand, investors who rely on quarterly data to make allocation decisions might view companies that opt for semiannual reporting with suspicion.
The threshold increase from $700 million to $2 billion for large accelerated filer status is arguably the most consequential change in dollar terms. Companies that fall below the new threshold would face reduced compliance costs and reporting obligations. For investors evaluating newly public companies, understanding which regulatory tier an issuer falls into will become more important than ever.
