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 unsecured Buffered Digital Notes due February 11, 2027, linked to the common stock of Constellation Energy Corporation. Each $1,000 note offers a fixed Digital Return of 20.45%, paying $1,204.50 at maturity if the stock’s Final Underlier Value is at or above the Buffer Value of $229.88, which is 80% of the Initial Underlier Value of $287.35 (the closing price on January 22, 2026).
If the Final Underlier Value falls below the Buffer Value, holders receive physical delivery of 4.35010 CEG shares per $1,000 note (with cash for fractional shares), which could be worth substantially less than the principal, including a total loss. The notes are not listed on any exchange, are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and to potential use of the U.K. Bail-in Power, and may have limited or no secondary market liquidity.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured Barrier Digital Notes due March 4, 2027 linked to the Nasdaq‑100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indices. The notes pay no interest and your outcome depends on the worst‑performing index.
If the least performing index finishes at or above 70.00% of its initial level, you receive $1,082.00 per $1,000 note at maturity, reflecting an 8.20% Digital Percentage. If it finishes below 70.00% but at or above 60.00%, you receive only your $1,000 principal. If it closes below 60.00%, repayment is reduced one‑for‑one with the index loss, and you can lose your entire investment.
The notes are not listed, are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and potential U.K. Bail‑in Power, and the issuer’s estimated value on the initial valuation date is expected to be between $938.90 and $988.90 per $1,000, below the initial issue price.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured Autocallable Contingent Coupon Barrier Notes linked to the common stock of Salesforce, Intel, ServiceNow and Twilio. The notes have a minimum denomination of $1,000, are scheduled to price on January 30, 2026, and are due on February 4, 2031.
Investors may receive a monthly Contingent Coupon of $17.167 per $1,000 note, equivalent to a 20.60% per annum rate, but only if on each Observation Date the closing value of every underlier is at or above 60% of its initial value. The notes can be automatically redeemed starting about one year after issuance if all underliers are at or above their initial values, paying $1,000 plus the coupon.
If not called, principal repayment depends on the worst-performing stock. If its final value is below 60% of its initial value and the best-performing stock also finishes below its initial value, repayment is $1,000 plus $1,000 times the return of the least-performing underlier, which can mean a total loss. Payments are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and the potential exercise of U.K. bail-in powers. Barclays’ estimated value on the initial valuation date is expected between $899.60 and $979.60 per $1,000 note, below the issue price.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured, unsubordinated notes linked to the common stock of NVIDIA Corporation. The notes pay no interest and do not guarantee full principal repayment. Instead, holders receive at maturity a cash amount based on how NVIDIA’s share price changes between the initial and final valuation dates.
If the stock rises, the payoff increases one-for-one with the share gain but is capped at a Maximum Upside Return of 38.70%, or $1,387 per $1,000 note. If the stock is flat or down by up to the 20% buffer, investors earn a positive return equal to the stock’s decline, up to 20%. If the stock falls more than 20%, principal is reduced beyond the buffer and investors can lose up to 80% of their investment. Payments depend on Barclays’ credit and are also subject to potential U.K. bail-in powers, and the notes will not be listed on any exchange.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured Buffered Autocallable Contingent Coupon Notes linked to the worst performer of the S&P 500 Index and the Russell 2000 Index, maturing in February 2031.
The notes pay a contingent coupon of $5.583 per $1,000 (6.70% per annum) only if on each observation date both indices are at or above 85% of their initial levels. Starting about one year after issuance, the notes are automatically called, returning $1,000 plus the coupon, if on a call valuation date both indices are at or above 100% of their initial values.
At maturity, if not called and the worst index is at or above 85% of its initial level, investors receive full principal; otherwise they lose 1% of principal for each 1% the worst index is below a -15% return, up to an 85% loss. The notes are not listed, are subject to U.K. bail-in powers, and have an estimated initial value of $874.40–$954.40 per $1,000, below the issue price due to fees, hedging and issuance costs.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured structured notes linked to the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indices. The Notes pay no interest and do not fully protect principal, instead providing index-based returns at maturity.
For each $1,000 Note, investors get unleveraged exposure to the least performing index. If that index rises, gains are shared up to a Maximum Upside Return of 11.25%, or $1,112.50 at maturity. If it falls but stays within a 20% buffer, investors earn a positive return equal to the absolute percentage decline, up to 20%. If it drops more than 20%, repayment falls dollar-for-dollar beyond the buffer and investors can lose up to 80% of principal.
Payments depend entirely on Barclays’ credit and are subject to potential U.K. Bail-in Power, which can reduce, convert or cancel the Notes. The Notes will not be listed on any U.S. exchange, and Barclays expects their initial estimated value to be below the $1,000 issue price.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured AutoCallable Contingent Coupon Notes due February 1, 2029, in $1,000 denominations, linked to the worst performer of the S&P 500 Index, Russell 2000 Index and Nasdaq-100 Index. The notes pay a contingent coupon of 4.575% per period (9.15% per annum), or $45.75 per $1,000, only if on each semiannual observation date all three indices are at or above their respective coupon barriers, set at 75% of initial value. Missed coupons accrue as "Unpaid Coupon Amounts" but are paid only if a later observation meets the barrier.
Starting after roughly six months, if on any call valuation date all indices are at or above their initial values, the notes are automatically called at $1,000 plus applicable coupons and unpaid amounts, ending further payments. If not called, at maturity investors receive $1,000 per note if the least-performing index is at or above its 75% barrier; otherwise repayment falls one-for-one with that index’s loss, up to a 100% principal loss.
The initial issue price is $1,000 per note, including a 2.10% selling commission; Barclays’ estimated value on the initial valuation date is expected between $919.60 and $979.60. The notes are not listed, offer no index dividends or voting rights, and are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and potential U.K. Bail-in Power, which can write down, convert, or modify the notes in a resolution scenario.
Barclays Bank PLC is issuing $3,825,000 of Trigger Autocallable Contingent Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq‑100 Index, Nikkei 225 Index and S&P 500 Index, maturing on January 26, 2028. The Notes pay a quarterly contingent coupon at 9.65% per annum (about $0.2413 per $10 Note) only if on each Observation Date all three indices are at or above 70% of their initial level (the Coupon Barrier).
Beginning July 21, 2026, if on any quarterly Observation Date all three indices are at or above their initial level, the Notes are automatically called and repay principal plus that quarter’s coupon, with no further payments. If not called, and on the final valuation date all indices are at or above their 70% Downside Thresholds, investors receive principal plus the final coupon.
If on the final valuation date any index finishes below its Downside Threshold, repayment is reduced based on the decline of the worst‑performing index, and investors can lose some or all principal. The Notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Barclays Bank PLC, subject to its credit risk and to potential exercise of U.K. bail‑in powers. The initial issue price is $10 per Note, while Barclays’ estimated value on the trade date is $9.674 per Note.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering callable contingent coupon notes due November 4, 2030, linked to the worst performer among the Russell 2000, Nasdaq-100 and S&P 500 indices. The notes pay a contingent coupon of 0.9167% per month (11.00% per annum) only if each index stays at or above its coupon barrier on scheduled observation dates.
If the notes are not called and the worst-performing index finishes below 65.00% of its initial level at maturity, investors’ repayment is reduced one-for-one with the index loss, and up to 100.00% of principal can be lost. Even if principal is ultimately repaid, investors may receive few or no coupons if any index falls below 75.00% of its initial level on observation dates.
The notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Barclays Bank PLC, subject to its credit risk and to potential exercise of U.K. Bail-in Power, which can write down, convert or cancel the notes. They are not listed, may have limited liquidity, and are intended only for investors who can tolerate equity-index downside and issuer credit risk in exchange for potentially high, but uncertain, income.
Barclays Bank PLC is issuing market-linked notes tied to the common stock of Netflix, Inc. The securities pay a fixed 8.10% per annum coupon, paid monthly, and have a principal amount of $1,000 per security, with total original offering of $1,425,000.
The notes can be automatically called on monthly call dates from July 2026 to December 2027 if Netflix’s stock closing price is at or above the starting price of $87.26, returning principal plus the due coupon. If not called, at maturity in January 2028 investors receive full principal only if the ending price is at or above the threshold price of $52.356 (60% of the starting price). Below that level, repayment falls in line with the stock’s decline, and investors can lose more than 40%, up to their entire principal.
Investors do not participate in any stock upside beyond coupons, receive no dividends, and the notes are unsecured, unsubordinated obligations of Barclays. All payments are subject to Barclays’ credit and to potential exercise of the U.K. Bail-in Power, which could reduce, convert, or cancel amounts owed.