FCA introduces new prospectus rules and POP

The FCA's new Prospectus Rules and Public Offer Platform mark a major evolution in UK capital markets
In a significant development for the UK capital markets, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published its new Prospectus Rules: Admission to Trading on a Regulated Market sourcebook (PRMs). These rules are being introduced alongside the Public Offers and Admissions to TraFding Regulations 2024 (POATRs) and aim to replace the previous UK version of the Prospectus Regulation. Additionally, the FCA has launched its regulations for the new Public Offer Platform (POP) regime. The PRMs and POP reforms signify a transformative shift in the legal framework governing public securities offerings and trading admissions in the UK.
The new regulations are set to take effect on 19 January 2026. The reforms are designed to rebalance regulatory demands, streamline capital raising processes, increase market competitiveness, and expand participation in capital markets whilst ensuring that investor protection and market integrity remain intact. Key changes in the prospectus regime can be found in Policy Statement PS25/9.
One pivotal change includes the raised thresholds for further issuances, increasing the requirement for a prospectus from 20% to 75% of already traded transferable securities. For equity securities issued by closed-ended investment funds, the limit rises to 100%. This is seen as a significant enhancement in capital raising opportunities for listed companies, enabling larger equity issues without a prospectus, including placings and rights issues. Furthermore, issuers must still evaluate the information needs of potential investors, especially those located overseas. The FCA will closely monitor future capital raisings under the new rules to assess impacts and potential market failures.
Additionally, the new rules present a lighter touch approach for prospectus requirements connected with multilateral trading facilities (MTFs), primarily affecting initial admissions and significant acquisitions. The introduction of Protected Forward-Looking Statements (PFLs) may encourage firms to include useful predictions in their prospectuses, as liability will be held to a fraud/recklessness standard.
In a further push towards sustainability, companies will now have a climate-related disclosure obligation, increasing transparency around sustainability-labeled debt instruments. The prospectus summaries will also see changes to allow for greater flexibility by increasing length limits and reducing content requirements. The time frame for making a prospectus publicly available prior to initial admissions will be reduced from six days to three, giving listed companies more agility in capital raising.
In tandem with these prospectus rules, the new POP regime will facilitate companies in offering securities without the need for a prospectus when these securities are not intended for admission to a public market. This new regulated activity aims to benefit small and medium-sized enterprises significantly.
In conclusion, the FCA's new PRMs and POP regulations strive to ensure issuers can raise capital efficiently while providing investors with adequate information for informed decision-making. The authority is committed to reducing unnecessary costs for issuers and lowering barriers for retail investors, simplifying participation in capital markets. Further consultations on related guidance and ongoing implementation tasks will continue as the January 2026 roll-out approaches.