Changeflow GovPing Banking & Finance SEC Reduces Tender Offer Period to 10 Days
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SEC Reduces Tender Offer Period to 10 Days

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Summary

The SEC Division of Corporation Finance issued exemptive relief on April 16, 2026, shortening the minimum tender offer period from 20 business days to 10 business days for equity securities offers meeting specified conditions (cash-only consideration at a fixed price, less than all outstanding securities, no competing tender offers). The relief applies to reporting companies under Regulation 14D or Rule 13e-4 and non-reporting companies under Rule 14e-1. Affected companies should evaluate whether the shortened timeline suits their operational needs and confirm their offer structure complies with the fixed-cash-consideration requirement.

“On April 16, 2026, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Division of Corporation Finance (Division) issued exemptive relief relating to tender offers of equity securities that would shorten the minimum offering period from 20 business days to 10 business days if certain conditions are met (Relief).”

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What changed

The SEC Division of Corporation Finance's April 16, 2026 exemptive relief permits a shortened 10-business-day minimum offering period for equity securities tender offers meeting specified conditions, reducing the prior 20-business-day requirement. Conditions include cash-only consideration at a fixed price, offers for less than all outstanding securities, no competing tender offers at announcement, public announcement with website hyperlink, and mandatory extension to 20 business days if a competing offer emerges. Public companies and investors in tender offer transactions should evaluate whether the shortened timeline suits operational needs and whether cash-fixed pricing aligns with transaction structure. The relief also removes the mailing requirement for companies relying on it, potentially reducing associated costs.

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Apr 23, 2026

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April 22, 2026

SEC shortens tender offer windows for certain offerings

Steven Boehm, Kristin Burns, Dwaune Dupree, Stephani Hildebrandt, Cynthia Krus, Sara Sabour Nasseri, Anne Oberndorf, Owen Pinkerton, Payam Siadatpour, Eric Simanek, John Verderame Eversheds Sutherland (US) LLP + Follow Contact LinkedIn Facebook X ;) Embed

On April 16, 2026, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Division of Corporation Finance (Division) issued exemptive relief relating to tender offers of equity securities that would shorten the minimum offering period from 20 business days to 10 business days if certain conditions are met (Relief). The Relief applies to tender offers for reporting companies made pursuant to Regulation 14D or Rule 13e-4 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act), as well as to tender offers for non-reporting companies made pursuant to Rule 14e-1 under the Exchange Act. In issuing the Relief, the Division cited the need to “address market inefficiencies, better reflect technological advancements, and reduce exposure to market fluctuations.”

Conditions

For reporting companies under the Exchange Act conducting a tender offer, the Relief permits a shortened 10 day offering period if certain conditions are met. The notable conditions include:

  • Equity Securities: The Relief is only available for a tender offer involving a class of equity securities.
  • Amount of the Class Offered: The offer must be made for less than all of the outstanding securities of the subject class.
  • Cash Only Consideration: The consideration offered for the subject securities can only consist of cash at a fixed price.
  • No Other Outstanding Tender Offers: At the time of public announcement of the tender offer in reliance on the Relief, the subject securities may not be the subject of a previously announced or pending tender offer by another offeror.
  • Required Extension: If another tender offer for the same subject securities is publicly announced following the commencement of a tender offer made in reliance on the Relief, then the initial tender offer must be extended to be open for at least 20 business days from the date the offer commenced.
  • Public Announcement: The commencement of the tender offer must be announced in a press release or other public announcement, and any material changes to the terms of the offer (e.g., changes to the amount of securities sought in the offer or changes in the consideration being offered) must be announced publicly in a similar manner. The public announcement must contain the basic terms of the tender offer, as well as an active hyperlink to a website address where security holders may access any other documents relating to the offer. The Relief also permits a shortened offering period for non-reporting companies conducting tender offers pursuant to Rule 14e-1 under the Exchange Act. Non-reporting companies are subject to fewer conditions, but notably are still subject to the requirements that the offer can only involve equity securities, that the consideration paid is cash at a fixed price, and that the commencement and any material amendments are announced publicly.

Considerations and Key Takeaways

In evaluating whether to utilize the Relief, companies should weigh the following considerations:

Market Fluctuations: By enabling the use of a shorter offering period, the Relief will allow companies to provide investors with more immediate liquidity that is responsive to market fluctuations, investor demand, and actual or perceived changes in the value of subject securities, especially with respect to illiquid and semi-liquid securities. Notably, the Relief is being issued among a backdrop of increased demand for redemptions of illiquid and semi-liquid securities, where issuers not listed on a national securities exchange generally provide liquidity to investors through tender offers on a quarterly basis.

Cash Only Consideration: Companies should consider the type of consideration to be paid, particularly if they have historically conducted periodic tender offers with a forward pricing mechanism or form of compensation that may not be considered “fixed” under relevant SEC guidance.

Public Announcement and Reduced Costs: The requirement to publicly announce a tender offer relying on the Relief notably omits the condition under the tender offer rules that materials must be mailed to all holders of the subject security, which can lead to significant costs. Accordingly, reliance on the Relief may reduce mailing costs for companies by removing the requirement to mail materials to investors. The Relief does not eliminate the requirement to file a Schedule TO or to otherwise comply with the applicable tender offer rules.

Coordination and Timing: Companies will need to consider the impact of shorter offering periods on their operations, including coordinating tender offer timelines with other corporate obligations, public filings, or securities offerings.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Eversheds Sutherland
Published
April 16th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Public companies Investors
Industry sector
5231 Securities & Investments
Activity scope
Tender offers Securities regulation
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Securities
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Corporate Governance

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