The White House is conducting an interagency review of an SEC rulemaking that would alter the cadence of U.S. public-company reporting, substituting quarterly 10-Q filings with semiannual financial statements for many issuers. As reported on March 30, 2026 by Investing.com, the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) has this proposal on its desk, a procedural step that starts a statutory clock for administrative review and potential modification. If implemented, the change would be one of the most consequential adjustments to U.S. periodic reporting in decades, reducing the frequency of mandated recaps of operating results and potentially changing how corporate information is disclosed between formal filings. Market participants — from institutional investors to corporate legal teams — are parsing the draft text and the expected timelines, while lobbying and comment activity are likely to intensify through the rulemaking process.
Context
The SEC's proposal to move many issuers to semiannual reporting comes in the broader context of a multi-year debate over disclosure costs, investor needs and the competitive position of U.S. capital markets. Regulators have cited the administrative burden of quarterly reporting as part of the rationale for reconsidering cadence, arguing firms could reallocate time and resources to long-term planning and capital formation. Critics counter that more frequent reporting increases transparency and reduces information asymmetry, particularly for smaller-cap issuers where quarterly visibility can matter to price discovery and liquidity. The White House review, which began as of March 30, 2026 (Investing.com), does not itself enact policy but is a gating step: OIRA typically maintains a review window that can extend up to 90 days for significant rules (U.S. Office of Management and Budget, OIRA guidance), and the outcome will influence whether the SEC publishes a final rule, revises the draft, or withdraws the proposal.
The procedural posture matters because if OIRA clears the text, a final SEC rule could arrive with an implementation timeline measured in months rather than years — potentially affecting fiscal-year reporting plans for calendar-year companies in 2027. The proposal is part of a package of SEC initiatives that the agency has signaled would rebalance reporting obligations and modernize disclosure formats; those broader changes intersect with the agency's digital tagging and XBRL programs. For institutional holders, the legal and operational shift would change surveillance workflows, model inputs and the cadence of engagement with corporate management. Historically, U.S. periodic reporting adopted quarterly disclosures as standard practice in the post-war era; any formal rollback would therefore represent a structural evolution with knock-on effects across auditing, compliance and investor relations functions.
The interagency review also surfaces federal policy trade-offs: administration officials must weigh capital-market competitiveness against investor protection. European and other international issuers operate under a variety of reporting cadences — some jurisdictions mandate semiannual reporting complemented by robust real-time disclosure rules for material events — which has been used in public debate to argue both for and against change in the U.S. The White House's evaluation is likely to consider international comparators, the SEC's cost-benefit estimates, and feedback from Treasury, Department of Justice and other agencies. Investors and corporate issuers will be focused on the timeline of public comment and the scope of exemptions or phased implementation measures that the SEC might adopt in a final rule.
Data Deep Dive
Three discrete data points anchor the immediate debate and the regulatory timeline. First, Investing.com reported the White House had the SEC proposal under review on March 30, 2026, marking the formal start of the OIRA consideration period for interagency clearance (Investing.com, Mar 30, 2026). Second, OIRA's oversight process commonly uses a review window up to 90 days for significant economically impactful rules, a period during which agencies can be asked to refine cost-benefit analyses or respond to interagency concerns (U.S. OMB/OIRA guidance). Third, from a filings-volume perspective, if roughly 4,000 exchange-listed issuers currently file three quarterly 10-Qs each year (excluding the annual 10-K), moving to semiannual filings would mechanically cut recurring periodic reports of that type by approximately 50% — lowering, in simplistic terms, about 12,000 annual 10-Q submissions to roughly 6,000, before accounting for carve-outs or material-event 8-Ks.
Those arithmetic implications are conservative and intentionally mechanical; the real-world effect on disclosure flow also depends on retained rules for current-reporting (8-K) obligations, reforms to MD&A or forward-looking disclosure safe harbors, and potential new requirements for mid-year earnings calls or investor presentations. The SEC's initial economic assessment in the draft is likely to include projected compliance-cost reductions and anticipated effects on information asymmetry, but previous SEC rulemakings show estimated savings often differ materially from ex-post outcomes when market practices adapt. For context, if institutional investors reduce reliance on formal periodic filings and increase emphasis on alternative information channels, index providers and data vendors will see subscription and processing demand shift — a factor that could reallocate, rather than eliminate, industry revenue pools.
Comparative metrics are instructive: on a year-over-year basis, U.S. disclosure volume under a semiannual regime would diverge from current practice more than any single recent SEC rule change, such as the adoption of machine-readable tagging or the enhanced conflict-miner rules, which produced incremental rather than structural changes to filing cadence. Against international peers, the U.S. would align more with jurisdictions that emphasize semiannual reports but retain strict immediate disclosure obligations for material events — a hybrid model that regulators and market infrastructure firms will scrutinize for unintended consequences.
Sector Implications
Sectors with high volatility and rapid information cycles — notably technology, biotech and energy — could experience the most pronounced practical effects from reduced periodic reporting frequency. For technology and biotech issuers, where binary events (trial results, product launches) can materially alter valuations, investors rely heavily on immediate 8-K disclosures and management guidance between filings. If the final rule clarifies that 8-K and other immediate reporting remain intact, these sectors may see limited direct change in informational access but meaningful shifts in how companies choose to frame mid-year narratives and investor outreach.
Conversely, large-cap, diversified firms with broad analyst coverage might benefit operationally from reduced compliance cadence, as teams currently dedicating substantial resources to quarterly packaging could reallocate to strategic reporting initiatives and longer-term planning. The banking and financials sector will be particularly attentive to any changes that could affect supervisory data provision or the timing of stress-testing disclosures. For funds and asset managers, a change in reporting frequency changes the input availability for factor models and short-term liquidity assessments; quantitative strategies that depend on small, timely disclosure deltas will need to adapt their signals or substitute alternative market data.
From a comparator viewpoint, mid-cap and small-cap issuers could face asymmetric effects: smaller issuers often argue quarterly reporting imposes disproportionate costs, while investors focused on smaller-cap liquidity argue quarterly transparency is essential. Equity markets could therefore see a divergence in liquidity patterns and trading spreads if investor engagement shifts differently across market-cap segments. Any final SEC rule that includes phased implementation or exceptions by market capitalization would materially shape these sector-level outcomes.
Risk Assessment
The principal regulatory risk is the possibility of unintended information gaps that increase short-term volatility or lead to greater insider informational advantages. If semiannual filings reduce structured disclosure without robust real-time event reporting and strengthened enforcement of existing 8-K standards, informational asymmetries could widen, particularly for companies with thin sell-side coverage. Enforcement data from prior SEC cycles suggests enforcement effectiveness and resource allocation will be central to maintaining market confidence; any scaling-back of periodic reporting without commensurate enforcement clarity could invite investor litigation and higher cost of capital for issuers perceived as less transparent.
Operational risk is also material: corporate issuers and their auditors would need to rework internal control reporting cycles, audit sampling plans and documentation practices to align with a semiannual cadence. Auditors may respond by increasing interim procedures or demanding alternative attestations, raising near-term audit fees even as recurring periodic disclosure costs fall. Market-structure risk includes potential growth in private disclosure channels and non-filed investor communications that are harder to standardize and audit; regulators will need to weigh whether additional rules governing investor presentations, guidance statements or webcast disclosures are necessary to preserve comparability.
A final risk is political and litigation exposure. High-profile investor groups, state regulators or members of Congress could challenge a final rule that they view as weakening investor protections. The litigation track record on SEC rulemakings shows successful challenges can delay implementation by years. For issuers planning capital raises or restructurings, regulatory uncertainty during the OIRA and final-rule period will itself be a cost, potentially affecting IPO cadence and secondary market activity.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital's view is that the headline reduction in filing volume — the obvious 'halving' arithmetic — understates the structural reallocation of informational flow the proposal would trigger. The likely outcome is not a simple trade-off between compliance cost and transparency; rather, it is a market-design question about how and where material information gets distributed, validated and priced. A plausible non-obvious outcome is increased demand for gated, higher-quality interim investor communications (e.g., certified mid-year presentations, enhanced MD&A supplements) and for third-party validators such as independent analysts or rating agencies to bridge any trust gap. We also anticipate vendors of alternative data and real-time market signals to accelerate product development, offsetting some intended compliance savings with new vendor spending by issuers and investors.
From a portfolio-constructive standpoint (not investment advice), the transition risk should be priced as a period of heightened dispersion in sector liquidity and valuation sensitivity to idiosyncratic news. That dispersion creates both operational headaches and potential market opportunities for asset managers who can process non-traditional signals and who invest in corporate access. Fazen Capital will monitor the docket, OIRA commentary and the SEC's final economic analysis closely — and publish deeper modeling on expected reporting-cost changes and information-gap scenarios at our insights portal [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Bottom Line
The White House review as of March 30, 2026 is a procedural but pivotal step for an SEC proposal that would materially alter U.S. disclosure cadence, with potential to halve recurring 10-Q filings and reshape information flows across market caps. Investors, issuers and service providers should prepare for a protracted rulemaking and litigation environment that could produce both cost savings and increased demands for alternative disclosure mechanisms.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
