HM Treasury has published ‘UK Prospectus Regime: a consultation’. It overlaps with a similar paper from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), ‘Primary Markets Effectiveness Review, a consultation’ released on the same day.

Both reviews reflected the Chancellor, Rishi Sunak’s, Mansion House speech in which he promised reforms to the regulation of capital markets and the insurance sector. While he seemed to accept that re-establishing the City’s access to EU markets with equivalence post-Brexit was increasingly unlikely, he saw the need to develop the UK's financial regulatory system more critical than ever.

The Treasury’s consultation is based on Lord Jonathan Hill’s UK Listings Review which outlined policy changes in order to attract innovative and successful firms to list in the UK and help companies access the finance they need to grow. The consultation sets out how the government proposes reviewing and potentially replacing the prospectus regime the UK has inherited from the EU.

The Treasury’s objectives for the consultation are:

Views from all interested parties on this consultation are sought, including from investors, financial services firms and accounting and law firms. When providing answers to the questions, detail on the reasons for your answers and any additional information that may help Treasury consider the next steps would be welcomed.

The consultation runs from Friday 2nd July to Friday 24th September. You can respond by emailing This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

The FCA also published its consultation, 'Primary Markets Effectiveness Review'. It's a wide-ranging look at how to improve the effectiveness of Britain’s financial markets. It too was responding to Lord Hill's UK Listing Review and the Kalifa Review of UK FinTech.

The FCA wants views from the industry and the public by completing the form on its website or sending a response to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. The consultation end date is 14 September.

External links

HM Treasury: ‘UK Prospectus Regime: a consultation’

Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), ‘Primary Markets Effectiveness Review, a consultation’

UK Listings Review

Kalifa Review of UK FinTech

Treasury consultation

Proposed approach

Delegation and accountability: the Future Regulatory Framework approach

The proposed new rulemaking responsibilities for the FCA would replace the existing Prospectus Regulation, an area of retained EU law. The government undertakes to consult on any changes to regulations.

What is the purpose of a prospectus when seeking admission to a regulated market?

The new rule-making responsibilities will be to enable the FCA to regulate admissions of securities to trading on Regulated Markets. The FCA will have broad discretion on the provision of a prospectus. The FCA will be able to specify in its rules when a prospectus is needed.

When should a prospectus be required for admission to a regulated market?

The government proposes granting the FCA discretion to determine whether or not a prospectus is required when securities are admitted to trading on UK Regulated Markets. It should also outline exemptions.

Recognition of prospectuses for secondary listings

The Government is interested in the creation of a framework that would permit overseas companies wanting a secondary listing to come to UK markets using an overseas prospectus prepared in accordance with the rules in the jurisdiction of their primary listing.

Prospectus content and ancillary provisions, ‘necessary information’ test

The government proposes prospectus standards should be based on the existing ‘necessary information’ test. The substantive provisions of the necessary information test are currently located in Article 6 of the Prospectus Regulation, following the 2017 reform. It is proposed to retain the substance of the core test.

Under the 2017 EU Prospectus Regulation, what was called the simplified disclosure regime for certain secondary issuances, set out in Article 14, a separate standard of preparation for these documents. It requires them to contain the relevant reduced information which is necessary to enable investors to understand.

Prospectus content

The Government’s preferred approach to prospectus content issues is that all content matters below the level required to establish a statutory standard of preparation should be delegated to the FCA including detailed components as required. 

Furthermore, the government does not propose any substantive amendments to Article 18 of the Prospectus Regulation that permits the FCA to authorise the omission of information from a prospectus.

Forward-looking information

Lord Hill identified the legal liability faced by companies and their directors as the main deterrent to the inclusion in prospectuses of the most useful category of information ‘forward-looking information. He saw these projections of the future profitability of a company as ‘key' data for investors.

The government outlined concerns that the liability which attaches to the information published in prospectuses is established by section 90 of FSMA was too strict even with Section 10 exemptions. This 'negligence standard' did not necessarily improve the quality of information that investors receive and specifically restricted financial information that was available in other authorised forms of communication.

This should change under the FCA's guidance.

Junior markets

There is a consideration for widening market access to companies through multilateral trading facilities (MTFs) which have fewer obligations than regulated markets but still require a prospectus.

The first new proposal is an exemption from the section 85(1) restriction on public offerings of securities with added conditions. The second proposal is the exemption and new prospectus reporting requirements defined by the MTF but under the eye of the FCA.

The government has also launched its Wholesale Markets Review, looking at creating a new small company marketplace.

The scope of the UK’s public offering rules

In part, the government is seeking to shake up 'public' offering rules. It proposes that the current reporting requirements should be relaxed if the offering is being made to existing shareholders.

A similar proposal of rules relaxation should the offering be to under 150 people or already identified as a 'Qualified Investor'.

Public offerings by private companies

The consultation document looks at raising money via crowdfunding, minibonds and equity issuance, highlighting that for many private companies the reporting requirements are too onerous. Given these concerns with the prospectus regime for private companies, the government is interested in looking at alternative obligations to the requirement that an offeror publishes a prospectus where a private company offers securities that are not to be admitted to a stock market. It offered three options:

Public offers by overseas companies

The government put forward three options:

Overseas private companies

The government considers the risks of cross-border public offerings in the securities of overseas private companies to be in a different category to those presented by listed companies and does not want to provide a facility enabling these companies to make public offerings into the UK.

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