Welcome to our dedicated page for Barclays ETN+ Select MLP ETN 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 linked to the common stock of American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and United Airlines. The notes pay a quarterly contingent coupon of $33.75 per $1,000 (equivalent to 13.50% per annum) only if on each observation date all three stocks are at or above 50% of their initial values. The notes can be automatically redeemed if on an observation date all three underliers are at or above their initial levels, returning principal plus that quarter’s coupon.
If the notes are not called and, at maturity, the worst-performing stock is below its 50% barrier and all three are below their initial values, repayment is reduced in line with the worst stock, and investors can lose up to 100% of principal$931.20 and $981.20 per $1,000, reflecting commissions, hedging and structuring costs. All payments are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and to potential loss under the U.K. bail-in regime.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering Phoenix AutoCallable Notes due July 30, 2027 linked to the worst performer of Oracle and Salesforce common stock. The Notes pay a contingent coupon of $25.833 per $1,000 (an annual rate of 31.00%) on scheduled dates only if each stock closes at or above its coupon barrier, set at 70.00% of its initial value. The Notes may be automatically called, starting about six months after issuance, if on a call date both stocks are at or above their initial values, returning $1,000 per Note plus the applicable coupon.
If the Notes are not called and the worst-performing stock finishes below its barrier on the final valuation date, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with that stock’s loss, and investors can lose up to 100% of principal. Barclays’ estimated value on the initial valuation date is expected to be between $936.50 and $986.50 per $1,000 Note, below the issue price. Payments depend on Barclays’ credit and are also subject to potential write-down or conversion under U.K. bail-in powers.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering preliminary AutoCallable Contingent Coupon Notes due February 9, 2029, linked to the least performing of Chipotle (CMG), Trade Desk (TTD) and NIKE (NKE). The notes pay a contingent coupon of $17.833 per $1,000 (an annual rate of 21.40%) only if on each Observation Date the closing value of every stock is at or above 60% of its initial level. Starting about one year after issuance, the notes are automatically called if all three stocks are at or above 100% of their initial value on a Call Valuation Date, returning $1,000 plus any due coupons.
At maturity, if not previously called, investors receive $1,000 per note only if the worst-performing stock is at or above 50% of its initial value; otherwise the payoff is $1,000 plus the full negative return of the least performing stock, which can mean a complete loss of principal. Investors do not receive dividends or voting rights and face issuer credit risk and the possibility that a U.K. Bail-in Power could reduce, convert or cancel the notes. The estimated value on the pricing date is expected to be $918.20–$978.20 per $1,000, below the $1,000 issue price, reflecting fees, hedging costs and issuer profit.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured structured Notes that pay a high contingent coupon but can return less than the principal, or even zero, at maturity. The Notes offer a Contingent Coupon of $16.875 per $1,000 of principal (20.25% per annum, 1.6875% per month) only on Observation Dates when the closing value of each of three underliers—AppLovin stock, SPDR Gold Trust and Intel stock—is at or above its specified Coupon Barrier (70% of its initial value).
The Notes may be automatically redeemed starting with the third Observation Date if each underlier is at or above its initial value, in which case investors receive $1,000 plus the applicable coupon and the product terminates. At maturity, if not redeemed earlier, repayment of principal depends on the worst-performing underlier relative to its 60% Barrier Value and on whether the best-performing underlier is at least back to its initial value; in adverse scenarios investors can lose a significant portion or all of their investment.
Payments are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and to potential write-down or conversion under the U.K. bail-in regime, and the Notes are not insured or listed on a U.S. exchange.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering $3,500,000 of AutoCallable Notes due January 25, 2029, linked to the worst performer among the S&P 500 Index, Russell 2000 Index and Dow Jones Industrial Average. The notes can be automatically called on scheduled dates if each index is at or above its call level, paying $105 per $1,000 note per year (a 10.50% annualized call premium), up to a maximum total return of 31.50%.
If the notes are not called and, at final valuation, the worst-performing index is below 70% of its initial level, repayment is reduced one-for-one with that index’s loss, and investors can lose up to 100% of principal. The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Barclays, subject to U.K. bail-in powers, are not listed on any exchange, and have an estimated value of $995.30 per $1,000, below the initial issue price.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering $2,000,000 of Buffered Callable Contingent Coupon Notes due January 27, 2028, linked to the worst performer of the SPDR S&P Metals & Mining ETF (XME) and the Global X Copper Miners ETF (COPX). The notes pay a contingent coupon of 13.00% per annum ($10.833 per $1,000) only if on each observation date both ETFs are at or above 70% of their initial values. Barclays can redeem the notes in whole, at its option, on specified call dates starting about six months after issuance at $1,000 per note plus any due coupon.
At maturity, if not called and the worst-performing ETF is at or above 70% of its initial value, investors receive full principal back; if it is below that level, repayment is reduced so that investors lose 1.428571% of principal for every 1% the worst ETF has fallen below a 30% loss, up to a total loss of principal. The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Barclays, subject to U.K. Bail-in Power, and carry no rights to ETF dividends. Barclays’ internal estimated value on the pricing date is $969.10 per $1,000, below the issue price.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering Phoenix AutoCallable Notes linked to the common stock of Vertiv Holdings Company, maturing in February 2029. The Notes pay a quarterly contingent coupon of $40.50 per $1,000 principal amount (4.05% per quarter, 16.20% per year) only when Vertiv’s stock closes at or above a 50% coupon barrier on each observation date.
The Notes can be automatically called on specified dates if Vertiv’s share price is at or above 100% of its initial value, in which case investors receive $1,000 per Note plus the applicable coupon and no further payments. If the Notes are not called and Vertiv’s final value is below a 50% barrier, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the stock’s loss, and investors can lose up to 100% of principal. The Notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Barclays, subject to its credit risk and potential U.K. Bail-in Power, and their estimated initial value ($900.20–$960.20 per $1,000) is below the $1,000 issue price, reflecting commissions and structuring and hedging costs.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering AutoCallable Contingent Coupon Notes due August 4, 2027, linked to the common stock of Western Digital Corporation. These unsecured, unsubordinated notes can be automatically called on specified dates if the stock is at or above the call level, returning $1,000 per note plus any due coupons.
Investors may receive contingent coupons of $17.50 per $1,000 note per period (a 21.00% per annum rate) only when Western Digital’s share price is at or above a 50% coupon barrier on observation dates, with unpaid coupons potentially catching up later. At maturity, if not called and the final share price is at or above a 50% barrier, principal is repaid; below that barrier, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the stock’s loss, up to a 100% loss of principal.
The initial issue price is $1,000 per note, with an estimated value between $894.20 and $944.20 and an agent commission of 2.275%. All payments depend on Barclays’ credit and are subject to possible write-down or conversion under the U.K. Bail-in Power, meaning investors could lose some or all of their investment even if the reference stock performs favorably.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured, unsubordinated structured Notes linked to three semiconductor stocks: Applied Materials (AMAT), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and Broadcom (AVGO). The Notes have a minimum denomination of $1,000, pay no interest and do not guarantee repayment of principal.
The Notes may be automatically redeemed on April 27, 2026 if the closing value of each underlier is at least 80% of its initial value. In that case, holders receive $1,170 per $1,000 Note (a fixed 17.00% Redemption Premium) on April 30, 2026, with no further payments.
If not redeemed, at maturity in 2029 investors get: leveraged upside of 2.00 times the gain of the worst-performing underlier if it finishes above its initial value; full principal back if the worst underlier stays at or above 60% of its initial value; or a dollar-for-dollar loss with the worst underlier if it ends below that 60% barrier, potentially losing all principal.
Payments depend on Barclays’ credit and are subject to potential U.K. Bail-in Power. The Notes will not be listed, investors forgo dividends on the stocks, and Barclays’ own estimated value on the pricing date is expected to be less than the $1,000 issue price.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured auto-callable barrier notes linked to four tech stocks—Salesforce, Intel, NVIDIA and Twilio—under its global medium-term note program. The Notes pay no interest and do not guarantee return of principal. Instead, on 48 scheduled Observation Dates from February 1, 2027 through the Final Valuation Date on January 30, 2031, the Notes are automatically redeemed if the Closing Value of each Underlier is at or above 75% of its Initial Underlier Value, triggering a fixed Redemption Premium that steps up over time from 22.600% on the first Observation Date to 113.000% on the Final Valuation Date.
If the Notes are not automatically redeemed, principal is repaid at maturity only under specific conditions based on the “Least Performing” and “Best Performing” Underliers and a barrier equal to 60.00% of each Initial Underlier Value. If any Underlier finishes below its Barrier Value and all Underliers are below their Initial Underlier Values, repayment is reduced one-for-one with the loss on the Least Performing Underlier, up to a total loss of principal. Payments are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and to potential write-down, conversion or cancellation under the U.K. Bail-in Power, and the Notes will not be listed on any U.S. securities exchange.