The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission will allow all companies to privately file early documents for initial public offerings, expanding the benefit beyond small businesses.
Confidential filing allows a business to gauge interest from investors for a potential deal and adjust its pitch before filing publicly. The process was initially implemented with the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, signed into law by President Barack Obama in 2012, which allowed companies with less than $1 billion in revenue to submit registration statements for initial nonpublic review.
Snap Inc., which raised $3.9 billion in March, is one of the largest companies to have taken advantage of the confidential process. The company filed late last year, people familiar with the matter said in November, before publicly unveiling its deal prospectus in February.
Recommended For You
Shake Shack Inc. and Twitter Inc. were also among so-called emerging growth companies that made initial IPO filings confidentially under the law. The process, which will take effect in expanded form on July 10, will be available for all IPOs and most offerings made by a company within a year of entering the SEC's public reporting system, the regulator said in a statement Thursday.
"We are striving for efficiency in our processes to encourage more companies to consider going public, which can result in more choices for investors, job creation and a stronger U.S. economy," SEC Chairman Jay Clayton, who took the post last month after being nominated by President Donald Trump, said in the statement. "By expanding a popular JOBS Act benefit to all companies, we hope that the next American success story will look to our public markets when they need access to affordable capital."
Clayton, 50, previously was a partner at Sullivan & Cromwell, where for more than two decades he advised public and private companies on securities offerings, mergers and acquisitions, corporate governance and regulatory and enforcement matters.
Since Trump nominated him for the SEC role, Clayton has focused on making U.S. markets more attractive. During his confirmation process, Clayton said he wanted to make it more appealing for companies to sell shares to the public rather than rely on private investments. He also promised to be " vigilant" in protecting investors in the process.
Companies, especially those in the technology industry, are increasingly staying private longer, amassing cash from backers in private funding rounds rather than tapping public markets.
"We applaud the SEC for today announcing it will allow all newly public companies to file registration statements confidentially," Adena Friedman, the CEO of Nasdaq, said in a statement Thursday. "We have long supported such an action and believe it is one step forward in making the public markets more attractive, which will foster economic growth."
Bloomberg News
© 2025 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.