SEC Proposes Major Overhaul of Public Company Disclosure Requirements
By
Adria Hunter
Summary
The SEC is proposing major changes to its regulatory framework for public companies, including potentially reducing quarterly reporting requirements and cutting the amount of information companies must disclose, such as executive pay. The proposals aim to make it cheaper and less burdensome to be a public company, representing some of the biggest regulatory shifts in two decades.
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Key quotes
· 3 pulledThe most eye-catching piece asks a question that would have been close to heretical a few years ago—do companies really need to tell investors how they're doing every three months?
The SEC is floating some of the biggest changes to its regulatory framework in two decades, all aimed at the same goal: making it cheaper and less burdensome to be a public company.
The further-reaching change is quieter: a proposal that would sharply cut how much most public companies must disclose at all, executive pay included.
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