A proposal in Washington could change one of the basic rhythms of U.S. markets: how often publicly traded companies must publish quarterly reports.
The SEC is reportedly preparing a proposal that would make quarterly reporting optional, allowing companies to file financial updates twice a year instead of four. Supporters say the current system fuels short-termism and increases costs.
Opponents warn that fewer mandatory check-ins would give investors a dimmer view of corporate reality and a much wider gap between insiders and everyone else.
This comes as a big surprise from the SEC, the agency most people associate with forcing companies to disclose more.
Public companies currently operate on a regular reporting cadence, and investors know that every three months they will see a new, standardized update showing how the company is doing. If that rhythm is disrupted, the market will still receive information, albeit not on a fixed schedule and not in a format that makes comparisons between companies and quarters easy.
What the current system does, and what could disappear
The disclosure of US listed companies consists of three categories.
First, there’s the annual report: the long, comprehensive documentation that covers the business, its risks and the audited financial statements. Second, there are quarterly reports, the regular interim updates that provide investors with unaudited financial statements and explanations from management about what has changed in the company. Third, there are event-driven disclosures. If a company signs a major deal, loses its accountant, completes a major acquisition or experiences another significant event, it must notify the market through a separate filing.
That structure gives investors a nice, predictable cadence.
The best way to understand the effects of this proposal is to focus on what remains and what thins out.
Annual and event-driven reporting would still exist, and the only thing that would be removed is the standardized, scheduled quarterly information between annual reports.
If that requirement becomes optional, some companies may still report quarterly because their investors expect it. Others may decide that twice a year is enough. The market would still hear from them, although the cadence would slow and the number of apples-to-apples checkpoints between different companies would shrink.
Under the current setup, a company that has had a difficult spring must confront investors with a formal update a few months later. With a biannual system, the same company could have more room before it had to provide a standardized snapshot.
So the biggest problem here is not a lack of information, but a longer period between mandatory disclosures.
Why supporters want this, and why critics don’t
Proponents of the idea make a serious argument. Their case starts with the belief that quarterly reporting pushes managers toward the next quarterly goal rather than the next five-year plan.
They believe the market has become too obsessed with short-term numbers. Executives make the quarter, investors react to minor setbacks, and companies spend time and money preparing dossiers that can encourage defensive decision-making instead of long-term investments.
Lighter reporting requirements, advocates say, could reduce compliance costs, ease pressure on management teams and make public markets more attractive at a time when many companies prefer to remain private longer.
There is also an international argument for the change. Europe and Britain moved away from mandatory quarterly reporting years ago, and Canada has debated similar reforms. Proponents have pointed to these examples and argued that less rigid quarterly earnings haven’t destroyed any of these markets.
But critics see the trade-off very differently.
Their case starts with a simple point, namely that voluntary disclosure is not the same as mandatory disclosure. A company that chooses what it shares and when it shares does not offer ordinary investors the same protection as a rule that forces everyone into the same schedule.
With fewer mandatory filings, investors will have fewer clear checkpoints, and bad news will have more space between official updates. Large institutions and well-connected professionals may be better positioned to map out what’s happening through management access, industry contacts and alternative data, while private investors wait for the next required filing. And when the numbers finally come, the reaction could be much more volatile than after a quarterly report, simply because more uncertainty has built up in the gap.
Proponents see short-term relief from pressure, and critics see less transparency, weaker comparability, and a wider information gap between insiders and everyone else.
Why should private investors care about quarterly reports?
The effects of this proposal are not limited to corporations, and will reach anyone with an index fund, a pension, a 401(k), an ETF, or an investment account.
Although most investors never open a quarterly return, they still benefit from living in a market where publicly traded companies know they have to return with a new set of numbers and statements every three months.
That routine builds trust, disciplines management teams and gives everyone from analysts and regulators to investors a common set of checkpoints. Even people who never read the documents themselves benefit from the fact that other people can and do read them on a predictable schedule.
That’s why this reported proposal fits into a broader issuer-friendly mood in Washington.
It’s a reflection of a regulatory environment that is more sympathetic to reducing burdens on companies and more willing to question whether investor protections built around regular disclosure are too demanding.
The US would not be alone if it went this way. Other developed markets have already relaxed similar rules. However, this does not yet resolve the question for American investors. A market can continue to run with fewer official check-ins. But the more pressing question is what kind of market it creates, and who bears the costs of the added uncertainty.
This proposal is much bigger than a filing rule overhaul because it isn’t really about paperwork. At issue is whether publicly traded companies should continue to show their work on a set schedule, and whether ordinary investors can continue to rely on a market that is asking them to accept less mandated visibility in corporate America.


