CLS Blue Sky Blog

Davis Polk Discusses SEC Guidance Facilitating IPOs During the Shutdown

Following discussions with Davis Polk and other leading capital markets law firms, the SEC posted updated guidance that provides a path forward for companies seeking to IPO during the shutdown. Because the SEC is currently shut down, it cannot declare registration statements “effective” and instead companies must file a fully complete registration statement and wait 20 days for it to automatically become effective.

We summarize the key points resulting from the new guidance below:

The updated guidance says a company can rely on Rule 430A during the shutdown, which means a company can launch its IPO with a price range on the cover and include the offering price in the final prospectus after the registration statement becomes effective (as it normally would in an IPO where the SEC declares the registration statement effective).

The staff’s existing guidance for IPOs is that a “price range in excess of $2, for offerings up to $10 per share, or in excess of 20% of the high end of the range, for offerings over $10 per share, will not be considered bona fide.” (C&DI 134.04) We believe that given the price range will be included in the publicly filed registration statement 20 days before effectiveness, it would not be unreasonable for a company to include a price range in excess of the limits included in existing staff guidance, so long as the range is reasonable.

As noted in the guidance, “companies that remove their delaying amendment with outstanding staff comments should carefully consider the material issues raised by the staff and not remove their delaying amendments prior to making the necessary changes to the registration statement.” In addition, companies that choose to remove the delaying amendment must instead include the following language from Rule 473(b) to go effective pursuant to Section 8(a):

This registration statement shall hereafter become effective in accordance with the provisions of section 8(a) of the Securities Act of 1933.

Given the uncertainty around the duration of the shutdown, the new guidance provides flexibility and clarity for companies seeking to go public during the shutdown. Other than as updated for the points above, the existing guidance remains the same for public companies and capital markets transactions as we addressed in our prior client update.

This post comes to us from Davis, Polk & Wardwell LLP. It is based on the firm’s memorandum, “New SEC guidance facilitates IPOs during the shutdown,” dated October 9, 2025, and available here. 

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