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The SEC Wants To Let Companies Skip Quarterly Reports. WallStreetBets Is Pushing Back

Published May 13, 2026
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Summary:
  • The SEC has proposed cutting four reports a year down to two.
  • WallStreetBets, the popular Reddit forum, filed a public comment calling 10-Q reports the most important tool small traders have.
  • More than 120 people have pushed back in the first week of the comment window.

The SEC wants to let public firms file fewer reports each year. WallStreetBets, the popular Reddit forum that ran the GameStop trade in 2021, just told the agency to back off.

The timing matters. SpaceX is lining up a U.S. listing that is set to give a lot of stock to small buyers.

What The SEC Wants To Change

Right now, every public firm files three short reports a year, called 10-Q filings. Each one shows how much a firm made, what it spent, and what it owns.

Each firm also files one big report at the end of the year.

The new plan would let each firm choose - stick with four reports, or drop to two: one short one and one big one. The SEC says the change would cut costs.

It also said the shift would help firms focus on long-term growth. That last part is what set off the pushback.

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Why WallStreetBets Is Mad

The forum's letter said 10-Qs are the most important tool small traders have. Big funds get a lot more - expert calls, satellite shots of store lots, and credit card data.

Small buyers have the 10-Q and not much else.

WallStreetBets pushed back on the cost claim. Apple files a 10-Q every three months and sits on roughly $150 billion in cash and investments.

Nvidia files one too, and it is worth more than the yearly output of most G20 nations. The S&P 500 just hit a fresh record high, and every firm in it files four times a year.

The forum's point was simple. If quarterly reports were crushing U.S. firms, the numbers would show it.

Why The Timing Is Bad

The plan lands as SpaceX gets ready to go public, and the deal is set to give small buyers an unusually big share. A line of AI and tech firms is queued up behind it.

If the rule passes, small buyers could hold stock for six months at a time. They would get no fresh data from the firm in that gap.

WallStreetBets said that gap has a cost. The space between what insiders know and what small buyers know, times every share owned during the wait.

The forum's tone was sharp. It said many of its users learned what a 10-Q was the hard way - by buying a stock, watching it drop 40% on earnings, then reading the filing to find out why.

What To Watch

The public comment window stays open until early July, and more than 120 people have pushed back in week one. The list is mixed - retail traders, planners, fund managers, and one former SEC lawyer.

The pushback has crossed party lines too. One planner wrote that the rule clearly tilts the field against retail buyers.

The group still missing is the one that usually wins these fights. Big funds have not weighed in yet.

When they do, the SEC will have to pick a side.

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