The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has proposed reforms aimed at simplifying initial public offering (IPO) requirements and expanding outreach to investors, as part of broader efforts to strengthen the city-state’s position as a competitive equities hub.
In a consultation paper, MAS outlined a three-pronged approach to improve the IPO process, including streamlining prospectus disclosures, simplifying secondary listing requirements, and offering issuers greater flexibility in gauging investor interest early in the process.
For primary listings on the Singapore Exchange (SGX), MAS is recommending a shift toward more focused disclosure of core material information that is most relevant for investor decision-making.
The proposal is designed to reduce the compliance burden on issuers and improve the clarity of prospectuses.
For secondary listings, MAS aims to align SGX’s disclosure framework with baseline international standards already adopted by many developed markets.
This move would allow companies with existing listings on major foreign exchanges to use the same prospectuses with minimal changes, thereby accelerating the dual-listing process in Singapore.
Another key proposal would allow issuers to begin sounding out investors earlier in the IPO timeline.
The change is intended to support price discovery and bookbuilding efforts while giving prospective investors more time to understand the offering and the business behind it.
The reforms are informed by industry feedback and benchmarked against practices in global equity markets.
In parallel, Singapore Exchange Regulation (SGX RegCo) is consulting on complementary measures to ease listing criteria on the SGX Mainboard, forming part of the initial wave of recommendations announced by the Equities Market Review Group in February.
MAS is inviting public feedback on the proposed changes until June 14, 2025. Additional reforms are expected in future phases, with further attention on investor protection and enhancing long-term shareholder value among listed companies.