Barclays says shift to semi-annual reporting could aid food companies
Investing.com -- Barclays analysts said a potential shift away from mandatory quarterly reporting could benefit U.S. packaged food companies by reducing short-term pressure as they navigate multi-year turnaround efforts.
The SEC is reviewing whether U.S. public companies should continue reporting financial results quarterly, according to Barclays. In September 2025, the Long-Term Stock Exchange petitioned the SEC to allow companies to report on a semi-annual basis. SEC Chair Paul Atkins has expressed support for giving companies flexibility to move away from mandatory quarterly Form 10Qs.
The SEC has submitted a proposed rule change to the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs for review, with a public comment period expected shortly and potential implementation beginning as early as FY27 if approved. The proposal would make quarterly versus semi-annual reporting optional, while maintaining existing requirements to disclose material events via Form 8K.
For packaged food companies, reduced reporting frequency could help ease short-term pressure as they attempt to reinvest in innovation, marketing, and price pack architecture resets, Barclays said. A longer reporting cadence could provide management teams with greater flexibility to absorb near-term margin volatility without the same degree of quarterly scrutiny.
Barclays said this could better align public reporting with the longer-cycle nature of brand building, portfolio reshaping, and innovation payback periods that are relevant for packaged food companies.
The firm noted that packaged food companies tend to operate in mature, lower growth categories where transparency, predictability, and frequent updates have been valued by investors. Less frequent reporting could increase uncertainty around near-term performance, especially given current volatility.
Companies would typically still provide a quarterly trading update so investors can track business progress, at least on the top line, Barclays said. Most investors already have access to weekly scanner data that approximates sales results.
Barclays said large institutional investors and active managers have voiced concern that moving away from mandatory quarterly reporting could reduce transparency, increase perceived risk, and raise the cost of capital for companies that opt into semi-annual reporting.
