Welcome to our dedicated page for Barclays ETN+ Select MLP SEC filings (Ticker: ATMP), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
The iPath Select MLP ETN (ATMP) is issued by Barclays Bank PLC, a foreign issuer that reports under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Regulatory filings for Barclays Bank PLC, such as Form 6-K reports, provide context on the issuer’s financial condition, risk metrics and regulatory disclosures, which are relevant to holders of ATMP because the ETNs are unsecured debt obligations of Barclays Bank PLC.
Through this SEC filings page, users can review documents that Barclays Bank PLC furnishes to regulators, including current reports on Form 6-K. These filings may include references to broader regulatory materials, such as Pillar 3 reports, which present key metrics and risk information for Barclays Bank PLC. While such filings are not specific to ATMP alone, they help investors assess the creditworthiness of the issuer behind the ETNs.
For ATMP, the most relevant filing types include current reports that describe regulatory publications, financial results, or risk disclosures at the Barclays Bank PLC level. Because payments on the ETNs depend on the ability of Barclays Bank PLC to meet its obligations, understanding the information in these filings is an important part of evaluating the ETNs.
On Stock Titan, SEC filings are complemented by AI-powered summaries that explain the main points of lengthy documents in simpler terms. Users can quickly see what each filing covers, how it relates to Barclays Bank PLC as the issuer of ATMP, and which risk and capital metrics may matter for an instrument that is an unsecured debt obligation. Real-time updates from EDGAR ensure that new Barclays Bank PLC filings are available as they are published, while AI-generated highlights help users navigate complex regulatory language.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering Autocallable Contingent Coupon Barrier Notes due February 16, 2027, linked to Amazon, Alphabet (Class C) and Tesla shares. These unsecured notes pay a contingent coupon of $28.75 per $1,000 (an annual rate of 11.50%) for each observation date on which all three stocks close at or above 50% of their initial values.
The notes can be automatically redeemed on quarterly observation dates starting about three months after issuance if all underliers are at or above their initial levels, returning $1,000 per note plus the coupon. If not redeemed, repayment of principal at maturity depends on the worst-performing stock. If the least-performing stock finishes below its 50% barrier and the best-performing stock is also below its initial level, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the decline in the worst stock, and investors can lose their entire principal.
The notes do not pay dividends or grant voting rights on the stocks and will not be listed on an exchange. They carry Barclays’ credit risk and are explicitly subject to U.K. Bail-in Power, meaning a U.K. resolution authority could write down, convert or modify the notes in a stress scenario. Barclays’ own models estimate the initial economic value at $924.60–$974.60 per $1,000, below the issue price, reflecting fees, hedging and structuring costs.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured Autocallable Contingent Coupon Barrier Notes due February 23, 2029, linked individually to Broadcom, NVIDIA and Taiwan Semiconductor ADSs. The notes pay a contingent coupon of $13.125 per $1,000 (15.75% per annum) only when all three underliers are at or above 55% of their initial values on scheduled observation dates.
If the notes are not automatically redeemed and any final underlier value is below its barrier while all three are below initial levels, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the decline of the worst performer, up to a total loss of principal. The notes are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and potential U.K. bail-in, have an estimated initial value between $926 and $986 per $1,000, and will not be listed on a U.S. exchange.
Barclays Bank PLC is issuing $7,500,000 of Capped Leveraged Buffered Nasdaq-100 Index-Linked Global Medium-Term Notes, Series A, due September 13, 2027. The notes pay no interest and the return depends on Nasdaq-100 Index performance between February 5, 2026 and September 9, 2027.
For each $1,000 note, holders receive 150% of any index gain, capped at a maximum settlement amount of $1,215.25, so gains above 21.525% are not passed through. If the index falls up to 10%, investors receive full principal; below that buffer, losses accelerate at about 1.1111% for each 1% drop, and principal can be fully lost.
The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Barclays, are not FDIC‑insured, will not be listed on an exchange, and are expressly subject to potential U.K. Bail‑in Power, which can write down, convert, or cancel the notes. Barclays discloses that its internal estimated value on the trade date is less than the $1,000 issue price, reflecting fees, hedging costs, and structuring margin, and that secondary market prices may be lower than the initial price. Tax counsel views the instruments as prepaid forward contracts for U.S. tax purposes, but the treatment is not certain.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering $5,355,000 of Capped Leveraged Russell 2000 Index-Linked Global Medium-Term Notes, Series A, due March 9, 2027. The notes pay no interest and the maturity value depends on Russell 2000 performance from February 5, 2026 to March 5, 2027.
Investors receive 150% of any index gain, capped at a maximum settlement amount of $1,275.25 per $1,000 face amount (127.525% of face). If the index falls, losses match the index decline on a 1-for-1 basis, down to a total loss of principal.
The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Barclays, subject to the credit of Barclays Bank PLC and potential exercise of the U.K. Bail‑in Power. They are not FDIC insured, will not be listed on an exchange, and their estimated value on the trade date is lower than the $1,000 initial issue price.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured, unsubordinated notes linked to the Barclays US Tech Accelerator 6% Decrement USD ER Index. The notes target a 12.40% per annum contingent coupon, paid monthly when the index is at or above 60% of its initial level.
Principal repayment is conditional: if the final index level is at least 80% of its initial value, investors receive full principal back; below that buffer, losses track index declines beyond 20%, up to an 80% loss of principal. The issuer can redeem the notes after about one year, paying par plus due coupons.
The underlier is an excess-return, leveraged index providing 100–400% variable exposure to a Nasdaq-100 futures index and is reduced by a 6% per annum decrement, which drags performance. Payments depend on Barclays’ credit and are subject to potential U.K. bail-in powers that can write down, convert, or modify the notes.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured, unsubordinated market-linked securities that are auto-callable and tied to the VanEck Semiconductor ETF. The notes pay a contingent coupon at a rate set on the pricing date, at least 12.90% per annum, but only if the ETF’s closing price on each monthly calculation day is at or above a threshold set at 70% of the starting price.
The notes can be automatically called monthly from August 2026 through January 2028 if the ETF closes at or above the starting price, in which case investors receive principal plus the applicable coupon and no further payments. If the notes are not called and the ETF’s final price is below the 70% threshold, repayment at maturity is reduced in proportion to the ETF’s decline, with potential loss of all principal.
Any payments depend on Barclays Bank PLC’s credit and are subject to the U.K. Bail-in Power, which can write down, convert or cancel the securities. Barclays expects its internal estimated value on the pricing date to be lower than the original offering price due to selling costs, hedging and structuring margins.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured structured notes linked to the SPDR® Gold Trust (GLD). These notes provide leveraged upside exposure to GLD, limited downside protection, and are subject to Barclays’ credit and U.K. bail-in risk.
If GLD’s Final Underlier Value is above the Initial Underlier Value of $427.13, investors receive $1,000 plus 1.25 times the Underlier Return, capped at a Maximum Upside Return of 20.00%, or $1,200 per $1,000 note. If GLD finishes at or below the initial level but at or above the Buffer Value of $384.42 (90.00% of the initial level), investors earn a positive return equal to the absolute percentage decline, up to 10.00%.
Below the buffer, principal loss is leveraged: investors lose 1.11111% of principal for each 1% GLD falls below the buffer. The notes price at $1,000, with a 1.042% selling commission and 98.958% of proceeds to Barclays on a $4,200,000 total offering. The Final Valuation Date is March 3, 2027, and the Maturity Date is March 8, 2027. Tax counsel views the notes as prepaid forward contracts, but warns of potential “constructive ownership” treatment and future IRS guidance that could adversely affect tax results.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering AutoCallable Contingent Coupon Notes due February 25, 2031, linked to the least performing of Vertex, Costco, Microsoft and Alphabet Class A shares. The notes pay a contingent coupon of $8.75 per $1,000 (10.50% per annum) only if on an Observation Date all four stocks are at or above 60% of their initial values. Starting about six months after issuance, the notes are automatically called, returning $1,000 plus coupons and any unpaid coupons, if all four stocks are at or above 100% of initial value on a Call Valuation Date. At maturity, if not called and the worst stock is below 50% of its initial value, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with that decline, and investors can lose their entire investment. The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Barclays, subject to its credit risk and potential U.K. Bail-in Power, and feature an initial issue price of $1,000 with an estimated value between $860.10 and $940.10 and selling commissions of 4.30%.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering contingent income callable securities due February 15, 2028, linked to the worst performer of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indices. These unsecured notes are principal-at-risk and subject to U.K. bail-in powers.
Investors may receive a quarterly contingent payment of at least $23.375 (2.3375% of the $1,000 principal) when each index stays at or above 65% of its initial level; otherwise no coupon is paid. Starting August 13, 2026, Barclays can redeem the notes at $1,000 plus any due coupon. If not redeemed, and the worst index finishes below its 65% threshold at maturity, repayment falls in line with the index’s loss and can reach a total loss of principal.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured notes linked to the SPDR® Gold Trust (ticker “GLD UP”), each with a $1,000 principal amount and a maturity on February 10, 2028. The initial Underlier value is $441.88, based on the Closing Price on February 5, 2026.
At maturity, if the Underlier return is positive, investors receive $1,000 plus the Underlier return, capped by a Maximum Return of at least 23.92% (illustrated maximum payment of $1,239.20 per $1,000 note). If the Underlier return is between 0% and -5%, principal is reduced 1% for each 1% decline.
If the Underlier return is below -5%, investors receive a Minimum Payment at Maturity of $950 per $1,000 note, meaning up to 5% principal loss. Payments depend on Barclays’ credit and are subject to potential U.K. Bail-in Power, which can reduce, convert, or cancel the notes.
The notes are expected to be treated as contingent payment debt instruments for U.S. federal tax purposes, requiring investors to accrue taxable interest annually based on a comparable yield and projected payment schedule, regardless of actual cash payments. The notes will not be listed on a U.S. exchange and may trade below the initial issue price in the secondary market.