SEC Streamlines Regulation S-K Disclosures

These amendments reduce specific disclosure requirements and permit more flexibility in disclosing material information about a registrant’s business.

BY ACCESSING THE FASB DOCUMENTS ON THIS SITE, YOU ACCEPT AND AGREE TO THESE FASB TERMS AND THE WEBSITE TERMS AS APPLIED TO YOUR USE OF THIS SITE OR ANY FASB LICENSED DOCUMENTS.

On August 26, 2020, the SEC adopted amendments to the description of business, legal proceedings, and risk factor disclosure requirements of Regulation S-K, many of which have not been updated in over thirty years. The amendments include an increased emphasis on human capital resource disclosures, which can be an important driver of long-term value for many companies and industries.  The new rules are substantially consistent with the proposed amendments from August 2019 with a few modifications and emphasize a more principles-based, registrant-specific approach to disclosures. The new requirements will be effective thirty days after their publication in the Federal Register. The key amendments are described below.

Item 101 (Description of Business) 

  • Require principles-based disclosure of the description of a registrant’s business, and information considered material to understanding the general developments of its business;  

  • Introduce a materiality framework in lieu of the previously prescribed five-year timeframe approach to business disclosures; 

  • Permit registrants to provide only an update of the general development of the business that focuses on material developments in the reporting period with a hyperlink to a previously filed document that, together with the update, provides a full discussion of the general development of the business;

  • Provide a non-exclusive list of disclosure topics that may need to be disclosed which are, in part, based on the existing disclosure topics, but:

    • Add a disclosure topic for human capital resources, including human capital measures or objectives that management focuses on in managing the business (to the extent they are material to understanding of the business as a whole); and

    • Expand the regulatory compliance disclosure requirement to cover all material government regulations, rather than solely environmental regulations.    

 Item 103 (Legal Proceedings) 

  • Permit the use of hyperlinks or cross-references to legal proceedings disclosure included elsewhere in the filing to avoid duplication (e.g., in the financial statement footnotes); and

  • Revise the $100,000 threshold for disclosure of certain governmental environmental proceedings to $300,000.  However, registrants are permitted to select a different threshold that results in the disclosure of material environmental proceedings as long as the threshold does not exceed the lesser of $1 million or one percent of current assets.

Item 105 (Risk Factors)

  • Require a summary risk factor disclosure of no more than 2 pages if the risk factor disclosures exceed 15 pages (a change intended to address the lengthy and generic nature of risk factor disclosures);

  • Change the disclosure standard from the “most significant” factors to the “material” factors required to be disclosed; and

  • Require risk factors to be organized under relevant headings with any risk factors that apply to an investment in securities to be disclosed at the end of the risk factor section under a separate caption.