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 offers iPath® Select MLP Exchange Traded Notes, senior unsecured notes with a $25 principal amount per ETN, linked to the CIBC Atlas Select MLP Index of midstream U.S. and Canadian energy and gas utilities companies. The ETNs mature on March 18, 2043 and are listed on CBOE BZX under ticker ATMP, but are not principal protected, so a fall in the Index VWAP level can result in a total loss of capital.
Returns are driven by the Index’s VWAP level, plus accrued dividends from Index constituent distributions, minus a daily investor fee accruing at about 0.95% per year and, for holder redemptions, a 0.125% redemption charge. Quarterly coupon payments, if any, equal accrued dividend minus accrued investor fee and can be zero if fees exceed dividend accruals.
Holders may redeem in blocks of at least 50,000 ETNs at closing indicative value less the redemption charge, while Barclays may redeem all ETNs at its discretion after giving 20 days’ notice. The Index is rebalanced quarterly, with the rebalancing period lengthened from four to eight index business days from April 11, 2025, and tax treatment is complex, including potential “constructive ownership” rules under Section 1260.
Barclays Bank PLC details the terms of its iPath® Bloomberg Commodity Index Total Return Exchange-Traded Notes, senior unsecured debt linked to the Bloomberg Commodity Index Total and listed on NYSE Arca under ticker DJP. The ETNs offer exposure to commodity futures, not physical commodities or spot prices, and are not principal protected and pay no interest. Investors receive cash at maturity in 2036 or upon early redemption based on index performance minus an investor fee that accrues daily (0.75% per year until April 30, 2015 and 0.70% thereafter). Intraday indicative value and daily redemption value can differ significantly from the market trading price, which may trade at a premium or discount due to supply–demand imbalances, liquidity and volatility. Both holders and Barclays may redeem the ETNs, subject to notice and size requirements, with the current minimum holder redemption size reduced to 5,000 notes at the issuer’s discretion. The supplement highlights significant risks including roll costs from maintaining futures positions, potential large losses even within a single day, issuer credit risk, complex tax treatment and the possibility of issuer-initiated redemption before maturity.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured, unsubordinated structured notes linked to the iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV). The notes have a minimum denomination of $1,000, pay no interest, and do not guarantee full principal repayment at maturity.
The notes may be automatically redeemed around one year after issuance if IGV’s closing value on the observation date is at or above its initial value, in which case investors receive $1,000 plus an 18.60% redemption premium. If not redeemed, at maturity investors receive leveraged upside at a 1.25 factor if IGV ends above its initial value, full principal back if IGV is down by no more than the 10.00% buffer, or a reduced amount if IGV falls below the buffer, with losses up to 90.00% of principal. Payments depend on Barclays’ credit and are subject to U.K. Bail-in Power. The estimated initial value is expected to be less than the $1,000 issue price, there is no exchange listing, and the U.S. tax treatment is complex, potentially involving prepaid forward and constructive ownership rules.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured, unsubordinated notes linked to the common stock of GE Vernova Inc. The notes pay a contingent coupon of at least $47.25 per $1,000 only when the stock closes at or above a Coupon Barrier set at 70% of the initial price on scheduled observation dates.
The notes are automatically called if the stock closes at or above its initial value on any observation date before maturity, returning principal plus the applicable coupon and any unpaid coupons. If held to maturity and the final stock value is at or above the 70% buffer, investors receive full principal plus due coupons.
If the final value falls below the 70% buffer, repayment is reduced by 1.42857% for each 1% decline below the buffer, which can result in substantial loss of principal. Payments depend on Barclays’ credit and are subject to potential U.K. Bail-in Power, and the notes are not insured or exchange-listed.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured, unsubordinated notes linked to the common stock of Freeport-McMoRan Inc. The notes have a minimum denomination of $1,000, an initial issue size of $500,000, and mature on August 11, 2027.
The notes pay no interest and do not guarantee full principal repayment. If the stock’s final value is at or above the initial value of $65.13, investors receive $1,312.50 per $1,000 note, reflecting a fixed 31.25% digital return. If the final value is below the initial value but at or above the buffer value of $48.85 (a 25% buffer), investors receive back their $1,000 principal.
If the final stock value falls below the buffer value, repayment is reduced based on the stock decline beyond the buffer, and investors can lose up to 75% of principal, as illustrated by detailed payoff examples. Investors forgo dividends on the stock, face Barclays credit risk, and are explicitly subject to potential U.K. Bail-in Power, which can write down or convert the notes. The estimated value on the initial valuation date is less than the $1,000 issue price, reflecting commissions, structuring profit, and hedging costs.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured structured notes linked to the Nasdaq-100 Index that pay no interest and may not return full principal. The notes are designed for investors with a bearish view, expecting the index to stay at or below its initial level on scheduled observation dates.
If on any observation date the index closing value is less than or equal to the initial value, the notes are automatically redeemed for $1,000 plus a preset Redemption Premium, starting at least 5.4375% on the first observation date and rising to at least 21.7500% on the final one. If the notes are never redeemed and the final index value exceeds a barrier set at 110% of the initial level, repayment is reduced dollar-for-dollar with index appreciation and can fall to $0.
The notes are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and to potential write-down or conversion under the U.K. Bail-in Power. They will not be listed on an exchange, carry an initial issue price of $1,000 per note with a 1.25% selling commission, and Barclays’ own estimated value on the pricing date is expected to be below the issue price.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured structured Notes tied to shares of Credo Technology Group, General Electric and Zoom Communications. Each Note has a $1,000 denomination and runs from an initial valuation on February 6, 2026 to maturity on February 9, 2029.
The Notes pay no interest and do not guarantee full principal. If on the May 6, 2026 Observation Date each stock closes at or above 80% of its initial value, the Notes are automatically redeemed for $1,255 per $1,000, a fixed 25.50% premium.
If not called, at maturity investors receive 2x the positive return of the least performing stock if that stock finishes above its initial level. If the least performer ends between 60% and 100% of its initial value, investors receive only their $1,000 principal. Below 60%, repayment falls one-for-one with that stock’s loss, down to a total loss of principal.
The offering size is $3,111,000, with 0.40% selling commission and 99.60% proceeds to Barclays. Repayment depends on Barclays’ credit and is subject to potential U.K. “bail-in” powers that can reduce, convert or cancel the Notes in a resolution scenario.
Barclays Bank PLC is offering unsecured structured notes linked to the SPDR® Gold Trust (GLD), maturing on February 10, 2028. The initial underlier value is $441.88.
At maturity, investors participate one-for-one in GLD’s price return up to a maximum gain of 23.92%, for a maximum payment of $1,239.20 per $1,000 note. If the fund falls up to 5%, losses match the decline. If it falls more than 5%, repayment is floored at the minimum $950, so investors can still lose 5% of principal.
The total initial issue size is $4,025,000. Payments depend entirely on Barclays’ credit and investors explicitly consent to potential loss or conversion under the U.K. Bail-in Power, which could reduce or cancel amounts due regardless of GLD’s performance.
Barclays Bank PLC prices a preliminary offering of structured Phoenix AutoCallable Notes due February 25, 2031 linked to the common stock of NVIDIA Corporation. Each note has a $1,000 denomination, a contingent coupon of $12.083 per note (14.50% per annum equivalent) and features automatic call dates beginning after approximately one year, observation dates through the Final Valuation Date, and a payoff that returns full principal at maturity only if the Final Value is at or above a 60.00% Barrier Value; otherwise principal is reduced proportionally to the Reference Asset Return.
The notes are unsecured obligations of Barclays Bank PLC, subject to issuer credit risk and the issuer’s consent to U.K. bail-in powers. The pricing supplement discloses an estimated indicative value range below the issue price and states commissions of up to $8.00 per $1,000 note. Secondary market liquidity is limited and terms, valuation dates and payments are subject to postponement and calculation-agent adjustments as described.
Barclays Bank PLC is issuing unsecured notes linked to the S&P 500® Index that pay a fixed 7.20% digital return at maturity if the index’s final level is at or above a buffer level. The buffer is set at 85% of the initial S&P 500 level of 6,798.40, or 5,778.64.
For each $1,000 note, investors receive $1,072 at maturity if the final index level is at least the buffer. If the index closes below the buffer, principal losses begin and are magnified by a 1.17647 downside leverage factor, potentially resulting in a total loss.
The notes mature on February 25, 2027, will not be listed on any exchange, and are subject to Barclays’ credit risk and the U.K. Bail-in Power, which can write down or convert the notes. Tax counsel currently treats the notes as prepaid forward contracts for U.S. federal income tax purposes.