Traders on prediction markets are increasingly betting that the US Securities and Exchange Commission will move forward with a major change to corporate financial reporting rules.
The proposal would allow companies to report earnings and financial statements twice a year instead of every quarter.
The possible SEC Reporting Change has quickly become one of the biggest talking points in financial markets this week.
Following the release of the proposal on Tuesday, traders on the prediction platform Kalshi sharply increased their expectations that the new rule will eventually be approved.
Market odds showing approval of the change by April 2027 jumped from 46 percent to 73 percent after the announcement.
Investors and traders appear confident that regulators are seriously considering the move toward semiannual reporting.
However, there is less agreement about how quickly the SEC could finalize the rule.
On Kalshi, expectations for approval before January 1 initially surged to 67 percent before falling closer to even odds.
The market later stabilized at around 57 percent probability for approval within that timeline.
Analysts note that such a rapid approval process would be unusually fast for the SEC.
Federal rulemaking procedures normally take significant time because of public consultation and internal review requirements.
The proposed SEC document reportedly spans 279 pages, making it one of the larger rule proposals currently under consideration.
Before any final decision can be made, the proposal must first go through a mandatory 60-day public comment period.
That review period only begins once the proposal is officially published in the Federal Register.
Legal experts say the Federal Register publication process alone can sometimes take several weeks.
A 2023 analysis by the law firm Wilson Sonsini found that larger proposals often experience longer publication delays.
Historically, SEC rules usually take at least a year between proposal and final adoption.
Some major rules have required multiple years before becoming official policy.
Despite those historical timelines, traders on prediction markets continue betting on a faster-than-normal process.
On Polymarket, traders currently place a 51 percent chance on the SEC ending mandatory quarterly reporting during 2026.
The proposal has sparked major discussion across financial and corporate sectors.
Supporters of the change argue that quarterly earnings reports can pressure companies into focusing too heavily on short-term financial performance.
Some executives and investors believe fewer reporting deadlines would allow businesses to focus more on long-term growth and strategic planning.
Critics, however, warn that reducing reporting frequency could limit transparency for shareholders and reduce the amount of information available to investors.
Quarterly earnings reports have long been viewed as one of the main tools investors use to track company performance and make financial decisions.
Public companies in the United States currently provide detailed quarterly updates covering revenue, profits, risks, and future outlooks.
Any move away from that system would represent one of the biggest changes to financial disclosure rules in decades.
The debate also highlights the growing influence of prediction markets in tracking public expectations around major policy decisions.
Platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket allow traders to buy and sell contracts tied to political, economic, and regulatory outcomes.
As a result, these markets are increasingly being watched as indicators of investor sentiment and public confidence.
The SEC has not yet indicated whether commissioners strongly support or oppose the proposal.
Regulators are expected to gather feedback from investors, corporations, legal experts, and financial organizations during the public comment phase.
The final outcome could have a major impact on how companies communicate financial performance to shareholders and the broader market.

