SEC disclosure rule set that governs narrative, governance, risk, compensation, and other non-statement content in many public-company filings.
Regulation S-K is the SEC disclosure framework that specifies much of the narrative and non-financial content companies must include in many public-company filings.
It matters because the reporting system is not only about raw statements. Investors also need management explanation, risk discussion, governance disclosures, and other structured narrative context.
Regulation S-K commonly governs disclosure areas such as:
business description
risk factors
executive compensation
governance and selected legal disclosures
Regulation S-K focuses largely on narrative and broader disclosure requirements.
Regulation S-X is more focused on the form and content of financial statements themselves.
SEC Reporting: The wider compliance framework shaped partly by Regulation S-K.
Proxy Statement: A disclosure document that often reflects Regulation S-K content requirements.
Form 10-K: A major public-company filing that relies heavily on Regulation S-K disclosure rules.