Changeflow GovPing Banking & Finance SEC Allows 10-Day Equity Tender Offers
Routine Notice Added Final

SEC Allows 10-Day Equity Tender Offers

Favicon for www.jdsupra.com JD Supra Finance & Banking
Detected
Email

Summary

The SEC Division of Corporation Finance issued an exemptive order on April 16, 2026 permitting certain equity tender offers to remain open for a minimum of 10 business days rather than the standard 20 business days required under Rules 13e-4(f)(1)(i) and 14e-1(a). The order applies to tender offers for equity securities of both reporting and non-reporting companies and establishes a framework which qualifying offerors may rely on for relief without seeking individual exemptive letters. The Division cited the need to address market inefficiencies, reflect technological advancements, and reduce exposure to market fluctuations as the basis for the relief.

Published by White & Case on jdsupra.com . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

About this source

JD Supra is the legal industry's open library where US and UK law firms publish client alerts, regulatory analysis, and case commentaries. The Finance & Banking section aggregates everything published by partners at firms covering bank supervision, payments, capital markets, fintech, securitization, AML, and consumer finance. Around 400 alerts a month from across the bar. Watch this if you want primary-source law-firm thinking on the latest CFPB rule, OCC bulletin, FCA consultation, or Basel update, before it shows up in trade press. The signal-to-noise ratio is genuinely good because firms only publish when they have something to say to their own clients. GovPing pulls each alert with the firm name, author, and topic.

What changed

The SEC Division of Corporation Finance issued an exemptive order on April 16, 2026 permitting certain tender offers for equity securities to remain open for a minimum of 10 business days rather than the 20 business days required under Rules 13e-4(f)(1)(i) and 14e-1(a). The order establishes a framework for both reporting and non-reporting companies, and qualifying offerors may rely on the relief without seeking individual exemptive letters. For reporting companies, third-party tender offers must be pursuant to a negotiated merger or business combination agreement for all outstanding securities, with consideration consisting solely of cash at a fixed price.

Affected parties considering tender offers should evaluate whether they qualify under the conditions and prepare for compressed execution timelines. The relief requires front-loaded disclosure preparation with deadlines including a 5:30 p.m. Eastern time Schedule 14D-9 filing on the first business day after commencement and specific announcement deadlines by 10:00 a.m. Eastern time on the commencement date. Early engagement with legal and financial advisors is essential given the condition-dependent nature of the relief.

Archived snapshot

Apr 25, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

April 24, 2026

SEC permits certain equity tender offers to remain open for 10 business days

A.J. Ericksen, Laura Katherine Mann White & Case LLP + Follow Contact LinkedIn Facebook X ;) Embed

On April 16, 2026, the Division of Corporation Finance of the US Securities and Exchange Commission issued an exemptive order permitting certain tender offers for equity securities to remain open for a minimum of 10 business days rather than the 20 business days required under Rules 13e-4(f)(1)(i) and 14e-1(a). The order applies to tender offers for equity securities of both reporting and non-reporting companies and establishes a framework which qualifying offerors may rely on for relief without seeking individual exemptive letters. The Division cited the need to address market inefficiencies, reflect technological advancements and reduce exposure to market fluctuations as the basis for the relief.

Key conditions

Reporting companies

For third-party tender offers subject to Regulation 14D, the offer must be made pursuant to a negotiated merger or business combination agreement, for all outstanding securities of the subject class, and the subject company must file and disseminate its Schedule 14D-9 by 5:30 p.m. Eastern time on the first business day after commencement.

For issuer tender offers subject to Rule 13e-4, the offer must be for less than all outstanding securities of the subject class.

In all cases, the consideration must consist solely of cash at a fixed price. The relief is not available for going-private transactions (Rule 13e-3), offers relying on the cross-border exemptions in Rule 14d-1(d) or Rule 13e-4(i), or offers where a competing tender offer is already pending at announcement. If a competing offer is announced after commencement, the initial offer must be extended to at least 20 business days from original commencement.

The offer must be announced through a widely disseminated press release by 10:00 a.m. Eastern time on the commencement date, including key terms and a hyperlink to all offer materials. Changes in consideration or percentage sought (other than acceptance of up to an additional 2% of subject securities) must be announced by 9:00 a.m. Eastern time on the fifth business day before expiration; other material changes must be announced by 9:00 a.m. Eastern time on the second business day before expiration.

Non-reporting companies

The order also permits 10-business-day offers for equity securities of non-reporting companies (i.e., issuers without a class of securities registered under Exchange Act Section 12 and not required to file reports under Section 15(d)), where the offer is made by the issuer or its wholly owned subsidiary for cash at a fixed price. The same advance notice requirements for changes to offer terms apply.

Practical takeaways

  • Accelerated timelines for qualifying deals. The 10-business-day period may be available for negotiated all-cash acquisitions structured as front-end tender offers and certain issuer self-tenders, reducing execution timelines and interim market risk exposure.
  • No individual exemptive letters required. Unlike prior no-action relief, which required transaction-specific applications, qualifying offerors may rely on this order without seeking individual exemptive letters.
  • Ineligible transactions must be identified early. Mixed consideration, unsolicited offers, going-private transactions, and cross-border offers relying on the applicable exemptions do not qualify. For third-party tender offers under Regulation 14D, the offer must be for all outstanding securities; partial bids are ineligible. For issuer self-tenders under Rule 13e-4, the inverse applies – the offer must be for less than all outstanding securities.
  • Target board process must be compressed. The Schedule 14D-9 deadline of 5:30 p.m. Eastern time on day one after commencement requires substantially front-loading target diligence and disclosure preparation, which differs from current practice, where the Schedule 14D-9 is generally due within 10 business days of commencement.
  • Disclosure must be complete at launch. The commencement-day press release deadline and specific advance notice requirements for changes to offer terms demand that execution mechanics and disclosure be finalized before launch.
  • Competing offers may affect availability of shortened period. A post-commencement competing offer triggers mandatory extension to the standard 20-business-day minimum.
  • Initial offering period only. The relief applies to the initial offering period as defined in Rule 14d-1(g)(4) and does not allow the shortening of any subsequent offering period under Rule 14d-1(g)(8).
  • Engage counsel early. Given the condition-dependent nature of the relief and compressed timelines, early coordination with legal and financial advisors is essential. [View source.]

;) ;) Report

Latest Posts

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.
Attorney Advertising.

©
White & Case LLP

Written by:

White & Case LLP Contact + Follow A.J. Ericksen + Follow Laura Katherine Mann + Follow more less

PUBLISH YOUR CONTENT ON JD SUPRA

  • ✔ Increased readership
  • ✔ Actionable analytics
  • ✔ Ongoing writing guidance Join more than 70,000 authors publishing their insights on JD Supra

Start Publishing »

Published In:

Corporate Finance + Follow Disclosure Requirements + Follow Exemptive Orders + Follow Financial Markets + Follow Regulatory Requirements + Follow Reporting Requirements + Follow Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) + Follow Securities Regulation + Follow Tender Offers + Follow Business Organization + Follow General Business + Follow Finance & Banking + Follow Mergers & Acquisitions + Follow Securities + Follow more less

White & Case LLP on:

"My best business intelligence, in one easy email…"

Your first step to building a free, personalized, morning email brief covering pertinent authors and topics on JD Supra: Sign Up Log in ** By using the service, you signify your acceptance of JD Supra's Privacy Policy.* - hide - hide

CFR references

17 CFR 240.13e-4 17 CFR 240.14e-1

Named provisions

Regulation 14D Rule 13e-4 Rule 14e-1(a)

Get daily alerts for JD Supra Finance & Banking

Daily digest delivered to your inbox.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

About this page

What is GovPing?

Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission

What's from the agency?

Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from White & Case.

What's AI-generated?

The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.

Last updated

Classification

Agency
White & Case
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Public companies Investors Broker-dealers
Industry sector
5231 Securities & Investments
Activity scope
Tender offers Equity securities M&A transactions
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Securities
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Corporate Governance Financial Services

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when JD Supra Finance & Banking publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

You're subscribed!