SEC Permits Accelerated Offering Period for Certain Tender Offers
Summary
The SEC Division of Corporation Finance issued an Exemptive Order on April 16, 2026, permitting eligible equity tender offers to use a minimum 10-business-day offering period instead of the traditional 20-business-day minimum. Eligible transactions include all-cash acquisitions of reporting companies structured as tender offers pursuant to negotiated acquisition agreements and self-tenders subject to Rule 13e-4. The order imposes procedural requirements including deadlines for Schedule 14D-9 filings and press release announcements for material changes.
What changed
The Exemptive Order creates a new optional framework allowing certain equity tender offers to operate under a shortened 10-business-day minimum offering period. Eligible transactions include all-cash whole company acquisitions under Regulation 14D and self-tenders under Rule 13e-4, subject to specific procedural requirements including filing deadlines, press release timing, and material change notification rules.
Affected parties—including strategic and financial acquirers, reporting companies conducting self-tenders, and their legal and financial advisors—should evaluate whether the accelerated timeline suits their transaction profile. The shortened period can reduce sign-to-close timelines to approximately four weeks but requires strict adherence to announcement and filing deadlines.
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Apr 21, 2026GovPing 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 21, 2026
SEC Permits Accelerated Offering Period for Certain Tender Offers
Michael Anthony, Tamara Brightwell, Robert Ishii, Remi Korenblit, Douglas Schnell Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati + Follow Contact LinkedIn Facebook X ;) Embed
On April 16, 2026, the Division of Corporation Finance (the Division) of the Securities and Exchange Commission, acting under delegated authority, issued an Exemptive Order (the Order) providing flexibility to shorten the minimum offering period for certain types of equity tender offers from 20 business days to 10 business days. The Order is intended to reflect technological advancements and address market inefficiencies in eligible transactions. The shortened offering period has the potential to compress sign-to-close timelines for well-organized friendly deals, and to accelerate the closing of some self-tender offers by public and private companies.
What types of tender offers involving reporting companies are eligible for the minimum 10-business day offering period?
- All-cash, whole company acquisitions. An all-cash acquisition of all of a reporting company’s outstanding shares by a strategic or financial acquirer, structured as a tender offer subject to Regulation 14D of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act). Importantly, the tender offer must be made pursuant to the terms of a negotiated acquisition agreement between the acquirer and the target. These deals are typically structured as “two step” transactions involving a tender offer and a subsequent merger. Hostile tender offers continue to require a minimum 20-business day offering period.
- Self-tenders. A self-tender offer by a reporting company where the offer is subject to Rule 13e-4 of the Exchange Act and is for fewer than all of the outstanding equity securities of a class. These are principally share repurchases structured as tender offers. What are the eligibility requirements to use a minimum 10-business day offering period?
In addition to the requirements above:
- For tender offers subject to Regulation 14D, the reporting company must file its Schedule 14D-9 no later than 5:30 p.m., ET, on the first business day following commencement of the offer.
- The offer consideration must consist only of cash at a fixed price.
- The securities subject to the tender offer cannot be subject to a previously announced or existing tender offer by another offeror.
- If a competing tender offer for the reporting company is announced after the commencement of the initial tender offer, then the offering period must be extended to 20 business days from the initial commencement date.
- The tender offer must be announced by 10:00 a.m., ET, on the date of commencement by widely disseminated press release that includes the basic terms of the offer and contains a hyperlink to a website with the tender offer materials. A Form 8-K furnishing the press release is not required.
- Changes in the consideration offered or the percentage of the outstanding securities sought to be acquired in the tender offer must be announced by widely disseminated press release or other public announcement no later than 9:00 a.m., ET, on the fifth business day before the expiration of the offer.
Any other material change in the terms of the tender offer must be announced by widely disseminated press release or other public announcement no later than 9:00 a.m., ET, on the second business day before the expiration of the offer.
What types of tender offers at reporting companies are not eligible for the minimum 10-business day offering period?Tender offers relating to insider or affiliate “take-private” transactions subject to Rule 13e-3 of the Exchange Act.
Tender offers made in reliance on the cross-border exemptions set forth in Rule 14d-1(d) or Rule 13e-4(i) under the Exchange Act.
In the context of the acquisition of a public company by a strategic or financial acquirer, how does a shorter minimum offering period impact the timeline to closing?
There is the potential for a meaningfully shorter time between signing and closing for public company acquisitions, which could reduce uncertainty and the potential need to react to changing circumstances. We expect the norm for acquisitions that utilize a minimum 10-day offering period to involve the parties taking approximately two weeks after the signing of the merger agreement to prepare the tender offer documents and make regulatory filings under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976 (HSR Act), followed by the offering period. This results in a sign-to-close period of approximately four weeks. In this scenario, the acquisition can be completed roughly two weeks sooner than a “traditional” tender offer done with a minimum 20-business day offering period. A sign-to-close timeline as short as approximately two-and-a-half to three weeks may be possible if the parties are motivated and well organized, prepare their tender offer documents concurrently with the merger agreement, commence the tender offer and make regulatory filings a day or two following the signing of the merger agreement and do not encounter any regulatory delays.
Are any private company tender offers eligible for the minimum 10-business day offering period?
Yes. The Order also provides for a minimum 10-business day offering period for tender offers subject to Rule 14e-1 of the Exchange Act at private companies if:
- the tender offer is made for equity securities of an issuer that 1) does not have a class of securities registered under Section 12 of the Exchange Act and 2) is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 15(d) of the Exchange Act;
- the tender offer is made by the issuer of the securities sought, or one of its wholly owned subsidiaries;
- the consideration is only for cash at a fixed price;
- changes in the percentage of the subject securities sought or consideration offered in the tender offer are communicated by notice to the holders of the subject securities no later than 9:00 a.m., ET, on the fifth business day before the expiration of the offer; and
- any other material change in the terms of the tender offer is communicated by notice no later than 9:00 a.m., ET, on the second business day before the expiration of the offer. The shortened offering period does not apply to tender offers by third-party purchasers, such as secondary market funds that buy directly from employees or investors conducting secondary purchases from existing shareholders. To the extent structured as tender offers, these transactions remain subject to the 20-business day minimum offering period.
What else is important?
The Order only shortens the minimum offering period under Exchange Act Rules 13e-4(f)(1)(i) and 14e-1(a)-(b) for eligible issuer and third-party tender offers. Other Exchange Act provisions (such as the antifraud and antimanipulation protections) are unaffected by the Order and continue to apply.
Is a shorter offering period right for my transaction?
A shortened offering period provides a significant new tool for structuring friendly M&A transactions for public companies, especially in deals with limited regulatory considerations. The ability to close the transaction in four or fewer weeks after signing provides a path to reducing the risk for all parties of exogenous events between signing and closing, in addition to speeding the delivery of consideration to shareholders. At the same time, acquirers and target companies should consider the benefits, and weigh the disadvantages, of a shortened offering period. A target company may be hesitant to shorten the time during which its board of directors can receive and consider unsolicited (or “topping”) proposals, especially if the company did not engage in a market check prior to signing, or the market check was limited. Additionally, a shortened offering period may have to be sequenced with any “go-shop” period provided for in the merger agreement to ensure that the target company gets the full benefit of its opportunity to solicit a transaction. An acquirer will also need to consider whether the risk of delays in obtaining regulatory approvals or the satisfaction of other closing conditions may counsel in favor of an extended offering period.
For public companies looking to engage in capital return transactions, the shorter offering period makes the issuer tender offer structure more attractive given that the 20-business day minimum offering period has historically been one of the more significant drawbacks of a tender offer relative to an open-market repurchase program or an accelerated share repurchase. For private companies, the ability to accelerate the closing of tender offers conducted by the issuer (such as those for employee liquidity) has the potential to be very meaningful.
All sides will want to think through these and other considerations carefully and should discuss, with each other and their respective legal counsel, the desired offering period early in the negotiation of the transaction. Given the competing considerations at play, the need to carefully structure and prepare for an eligible transaction in early stages, and the various execution risks that may arise from an accelerated closing timeline, parties should work closely with an advisor team with experience successfully executing tender offer transactions and the expertise to balance relevant advantages and disadvantages.
[1] Under the HSR Act, cash tender offers are subject to a 15-day waiting period from filing. This contrasts with the 30-day waiting period for acquisitions where a shareholder vote is required.
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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.
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