By Suzanne McGee, Douglas Gillison and Anirban Sen
WASHINGTON, May 5 (Reuters) – Wall Street’s top regulator on Tuesday proposed ending quarterly earnings reporting requirements for U.S.-traded โcompanies and allowing them to switch to twice-annual reports.
President Donald Trump raised the โidea during his first term and it re-emerged as an administration priority last September.
The Securities and Exchange Commission wants โto give publicly traded companies the option to file their earnings twice annually, a move that would end a 55-year-old requirement that U.S. public companies share detailed financial results four times a year, within 45 days of the end of their fiscal quarters.
“The rigidity of the โSECโs rules has prevented companies and โ their investors from determining for themselves the interim reporting frequency that best serves their business needs and investors,” said Paul Atkins, chair of โ the SEC, in a statement on Tuesday.
The move is supported by a number of corporations and investment banks such as JPMorgan Chase, which argue that quarterly reporting places an onerous and costly โburden on โbusinesses.
They say it also fosters corporate short-termism at โthe expense of long-term planning and โis one factor behind a sharp decline in the number of publicly traded firms in the U.S. over the last decade.
Some investors, however, contend that the quarterly earnings requirement makes markets more transparent and less volatile, setting the stage for a financial industry tug-of-war as formal comments on the proposal stream into the SEC over the coming 60 days.
Companies will โnot necessarily take immediate advantage of the permission โto switch to semiannual reporting, according to asset managers.
The โchange would require some index providers โto update the methodology for constructing investment benchmarks. While the Nasdaq 100 does โnot require its constituents to report earnings โevery quarter, there are โquarterly reporting rules governing the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index.
Nasdaq said in a white paper published last year that quarterly reporting is especially burdensome for small and โmedium-sized companies that must allocate โa disproportionate amount of time and resources to tackle the red tape.
(Reporting by โSuzanne McGee in Providence, RI, Douglas Gillison in Washington, DC and Anirban โSen in New York, Editing by Edmund Klamann)