SEC Staff Revises Guidance on Shortened Debt Tender Offers, Expands Guidance to Cover Tender Offers for High-Yield Debt and Certain Exchange Offers


The staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission recently issued a no-action letter that substantially revises its long-standing guidance for shortened tender offers for non-convertible debt securities. The letter permits debt tender offers meeting certain conditions to be held open for as short as five business days, instead of the twenty business days required by Rule 14e-1(a) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Notably, the letter extends this relief to tender offers for non-investment grade, or high-yield, debt securities and certain exchange offers. The staff’s prior guidance permitted an abbreviated offer period only for cash tender offers for non-convertible investment grade debt securities.

The new letter supersedes all of the staff’s prior no-action letters regarding abbreviated tender offers for non-convertible debt securities and will have important implications for market practice in debt tender offers. The letter is effective for tender offers commencing after January 23, 2015.

Eligible Tender Offers

In order to be eligible for a shortened offer period, the tender offer must:

The consideration offered in a five-business-day tender offer may be a fixed amount or may be based on a fixed spread to a  benchmark, such as Treasury rates, LIBOR or swap rates.  The interest rate on Qualified Debt Securities offered also may be fixed or based on a fixed spread to a benchmark.

Disqualifying Circumstances

In addition to the eligibility requirements described above, the no-action letter provides that an abbreviated tender offer may not be made where certain circumstances exist.  Specifically, an abbreviated tender offer may not:

Procedural Requirements

The no-action letter sets forth specific procedural requirements for abbreviated debt tender offers, including some requirements that did not exist under the SEC staff’s prior no-action letters.  These procedural requirements include the following:

Important Changes to Current Practice for Debt Tender Offers

As described above, the new no-action letter affects both the types of tender offers that may be made with a shortened offer period and the procedures for making those tender offers.  Significant changes to current practice resulting from the letter include the following:


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National Law Review, Volume V, Number 43