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Special-purpose acquisition company

A special purpose acquisition company (SPAC; /spæk/), also known as a "blank check company", is a shell corporation listed on a stock exchange with the purpose of acquiring (or merging with) a private company, thus making the private company public without going through the initial public offering process, which often carries significant procedural and regulatory burdens.[1][2] According to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), SPACs are created specifically to pool funds to finance a future merger or acquisition opportunity within a set timeframe; these opportunities usually have yet to be identified while raising funds.[3]

In the U.S., SPACs are registered with the SEC and considered publicly traded companies. The general public may buy their shares on stock exchanges before any merger or acquisition takes place. For this reason they have at times been referred to as the "poor man's private equity funds."[4] The majority of companies pursuing SPACs do so on the Nasdaq or New York Stock Exchange in the US, although other exchanges, such as the Euronext Amsterdam, Singapore Exchange, and Hong Kong Stock Exchange have also overseen a small volume of SPAC deals.[5]

Despite the popularity and growth in the number of SPACs, academic analysis shows investor returns on SPAC companies post-merger are almost uniformly negative, although investors in SPACs and merged companies may earn excess returns immediately after the merger.[6] Proliferation of SPACs usually accelerates around periods of economic bubbles, such as the "everything bubble" between 2020 and 2021.[7]

Characteristics edit

Mechanics edit

SPACs generally trade as units or as separate common shares and warrants on the Nasdaq and New York Stock Exchange (as of 2008) once the public offering has been declared effective by the SEC, distinguishing the SPAC from a blank check company formed under SEC Rule 419.[8][citation needed] Commonly, units are denoted with the letter "u" (for unit) appended to the ticker symbol of SPAC shares.[9]

Trading liquidity of the SPAC's securities provide investors with a flexible exit strategy. In addition, the public currency enhances the position of the SPAC when negotiating a business combination with a potential merger or acquisition target. The common share price must be added to the trading price of the warrants to get an accurate picture of the SPAC's performance.[citation needed]

By market convention, 85% to 100% of the proceeds raised in the IPO for the SPAC are held in trust to be used at a later date for the merger or acquisition.[10] A SPAC's trust account can only be used to fund a shareholder-approved business combination or to return capital to public shareholders at a charter extension or business combination approval meeting.[citation needed]

Each SPAC has its own liquidation window within which it must complete a merger or an acquisition; past this deadline the SPAC will dissolve and return assets to its stockholders. In practice, SPAC sponsors often extend the life of a SPAC by making a contribution to the trust account to entice shareholders to vote in favor of a charter amendment that delays the liquidation date.[citation needed]

In addition, the target of the acquisition must have a fair market value that is equal to at least 80% of the SPAC's net assets at the time of acquisition. Previous SPAC structures required a positive shareholder vote by 80% of the SPAC's public shareholders for the transaction to be consummated.[11] However, current SPAC provisions do not require a shareholder vote for the transaction to be consummated unless as follows:[citation needed]

Type of transaction and shareholder approved required
Purchase of assets No
Purchase of stock of target not involving a merger with the company No
Merger of target with a subsidiary of the company No
Merger of the company with a target Yes

Governance edit

To allow for stockholders of the SPAC to make an informed decision on whether they wish to approve the business combination, the company must make full disclosure to stockholders of the target business, including complete audited financials, and terms of the proposed business combination via an SEC merger proxy statement. All common share stockholders of the SPAC are granted voting rights at a shareholder meeting to approve or reject the proposed business combination. A number of SPACs have also been placed on the London Stock Exchange AIM exchange. These SPACs do not have the aforementioned voting thresholds.[citation needed]

Since the financial crisis,[when?][which?] protections for common shareholders have been implemented, allowing stockholders to vote in favor of a deal and still redeem their shares for a pro-rata share of the trust account. (This is significantly different from the blind pool – blank check companies of the 1980s, which were a form of limited partnership that did not specify what investment opportunities the company plans to pursue.) The assets of the trust are only released if a business combination is approved by the voting shareholders, or a business combination is not consummated within the amount of time allowed by a company's articles of incorporation.[citation needed]

Management edit

The SPAC is usually led by a management team composed of three or more members with prior private equity, mergers and acquisitions, and/or operating experience. The management team of a SPAC typically receives 20% of the equity in the vehicle at the time of offering, exclusive of the value of the warrants. The equity is usually held in escrow for two to three years, and management normally agrees to purchase warrants or units from the company in a private placement immediately prior to the offering. The proceeds from this sponsor investment (usually equal to between 2% and 8% of the amount being raised in the public offering) are placed in the trust and distributed to public stockholders in the event of liquidation.[citation needed]

No salaries, finder's fees, or other cash compensation are paid to the management team prior to the business combination, and the management team does not participate in a liquidating distribution if it fails to consummate a successful business combination. In many cases, management teams agree to pay for the expenses in excess of the trusts if there is a liquidation of the SPAC because no target has been found. Conflicts of interest are minimized within the SPAC structure because all management teams agree to offer suitable prospective target businesses to the SPAC before any other acquisition fund, subject to pre-existing fiduciary duties. The SPAC is further prohibited from consummating a business combination with any entity affiliated with an insider, unless a fairness opinion from an independent investment banking firm states that the combination is fair to the shareholders.[citation needed]

Banking edit

SPAC Research, an entity running a SPAC database, maintains an underwriter league table which can be sorted by bookrunner volume or other criteria for any year or selection of years.[12] As of January 2021 I-Bankers Securities Inc. stated that it had participated in 132 SPAC IPOs as lead or co-manager since 2004.[13] In the years leading up to 2021, bulge bracket banks started participating in more SPAC IPOs, with Cantor Fitzgerald & Co. and Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. on the cover of 30 SPAC IPOs from 2015 to August 2019.[14] Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, and BofA have all built a significant SPAC practice, while Cantor Fitzgerald led all SPAC underwriters in 2019 by book-running 14 SPACs that raised over US$3.08 billion in IPO proceeds.[12]

SPACs in Europe edit

In July 2007, Pan-European Hotel Acquisition Company N.V. was the first SPAC offering listed on the Euronext Amsterdam, raising approximately €115 million. I-Bankers Securities has been the underwriter with CRT Capital Group as lead-underwriter.[15][16] That listing on NYSE Euronext (Amsterdam) was followed by Liberty International Acquisition Company, raising €600 million in January 2008. Liberty is the third largest SPAC in the world and the largest outside the U.S. The first German SPAC was Germany1 Acquisition Ltd., which raised $437.2 million at Euronext Amsterdam with Deutsche Bank and I-Bankers Securities as underwriters.[17][13] Loyens & Loeff served as legal counsels in The Netherlands.[15]

In March 2021, a report prepared by Lord Hill for the Chancellor of Exchequer recommended a series of changes to London company listing rules to make them more favorable to SPAC listings.[18] Among the report's proposals is to reduce the percentage of shares that must be offered to the public from 25% to 15%.[19]

SPACs in Asia edit

On March 18, 2022, Aquila Acquisition Corp debuted on the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited (HKEX). The IPO received lukewarm reception by investors, with shares down 3% in the two-week period post-IPO. Despite this decrease, there is a high demand for SPAC public offerings in Hong Kong, with HKEX reporting that they have received applications for 11 additional SPAC IPOs.[20]

SPACs in emerging markets edit

Emerging market focused SPACs, particularly those seeking to consummate a business combination in China, have been incorporating a 30/36 month timeline to account for the additional time that it has taken previous similar entities to successfully open their business combinations.[citation needed]

History edit

Since the 1990s, SPACs have existed in the technology, healthcare, logistics, media, retail and telecommunications industries. Their history began with investment bank GKN Securities, specifically, founders David Nussbaum,[21] Roger Gladstone, and Robert Gladstone, who later founded EarlyBirdCapital with Steve Levine and David Miller (currently managing partner of Graubard Miller law firm) and who developed the template.[citation needed]

The success of SPACs in building equity value for their shareholders has drawn interest from investors such as Bill Ackman who had backed three SPACs as of 2015, including the SPAC that took Burger King public.[22][23][24][25]

SPAC IPOs have experienced drastic fluctuations since 2009, peaking in 2021 with $162.503 billion raised:
SPAC IPOs in the United States[26]
IPO Year IPO Count Gross Public Proceeds
(in billions)
2009 1 $0.036
2010 7 $0.503
2011 15 $1.082
2012 9 $0.491
2013 10 $1.455
2014 12 $1.750
2015 20 $3.902
2016 13 $3.499
2017 34 $10.048
2018 46 $10.752
2019 59 $13.608
2020 248 $83.380
2021 613 $162.503
2022 86 $13.431
2023 31 $3.848
2024* 4 $0.511
 
Graph-diagram of the number of IPO companies which used SPAC to go public.*[26]

*As of 29 February 2024

Regulation edit

In the US the SPAC public offering structure is governed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). A public offering for a SPAC is typically filed with the SEC under an S-1 registration statement (or an F-1 for a foreign private issuer) and is classified by the SEC under SIC code 6770 - Blank Checks. Full disclosure of the SPAC structure, target industries or geographic regions, management team biographies, share ownership, potential conflicts of interest and risk factors are standard material covered in the S-1 registration statement. It is believed that the SEC has studied SPACs to determine whether they require special regulations to ensure that these vehicles are not abused as blind pool trusts[clarification needed] and blank-check corporations have been over the years. Many[who?] believe that SPACs do have corporate governance mechanisms in place to protect shareholders. SPACs listed on the American Stock Exchange are required to be Sarbanes-Oxley compliant at the time of the offering, including such mandatory requirements as a majority of the board of directors being independent, and having audit and compensation committees.[citation needed]

Regulatory Developments edit

In 2022, Elizabeth Warren released a report showing that Wall Street insiders were using SPACs in ways that harmed investors, and called for regulations to curb the abuse.[27][28]

On January 24th, 2024, the SEC unveiled new rules for Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs), introducing clarifications to enhance regulatory transparency and integrity without significantly altering the existing framework. Critical updates include maintaining the current stance on SPACs under the '40 Act and the definition of banks as underwriters while refining the criteria for forward-looking statements by redefining "blank check company" and eliminating one safe harbor provision.[29] Additionally, the SEC has encouraged more realistic management projections for DeSPAC transactions and required detailed disclosures on board votes and the dilutive impacts of compensation and securities issuances.[29] These developments aim to enhance transparency and integrity within the SPAC ecosystem, reflecting a cautious approach to regulation without fundamentally altering existing practices.[29] Warren commended the SEC on the new rules.[30]

Statistics edit

According to an industry study published in January 2019, from 2004 through 2018, approximately $49.14 billion was raised across 332 SPAC IPOs in the US. In that period, 2018 was the largest year for SPAC issuance since 2007, with 46 SPAC IPOs raising approximately $10.74 billion. SPACs seeking an acquisition in the energy sector raised $1.4bn in 2018, after raising a record $3.9bn in 2017. NASDAQ was the most common listing exchange for SPACs in 2018, with 34 SPACs raising $6.4bn. GS Acquisition Holdings Corp. and Churchill Capital Corp. raised the largest SPACs of 2018, with $690mm each in IPO proceeds.[31] In 2019, 59 SPAC IPO's raised $13.6 billion.[32] Nearly 250 SPACs raised more than $83 billion in 2020. In the first month of 2021 there were 75 SPACs.[33]

In a March 2020 event, Allison Lee, acting chair of the SEC, said that the "investment returns don't match the hype surrounding the SPAC bubble."[34]

Past performance edit

A study found that as of the 1st of December 2022, American-listed SPACs that completed their mergers between July 2020 and December 2021 had a mean share price of $3.85. This constitutes a fall of over 60% from the standard $10 per share that SPAC shareholders could have received if they redeemed their shares. The study also found that “The average post-merger SPAC during this period underperformed the average traditional IPO by 26%.[35] Another study, focusing on a longer timeframe of U.S. SPACs from December 2012 until June 2021 found average stock price decreases of 14.1% after 1 year of the merger announcement and 18% after 2 years.[36]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Domonoske, Camila (2020-12-29). "The Spectacular Rise Of SPACs: The Backwards IPO That's Taking Over Wall Street". NPR. from the original on 2021-02-22. So what is a SPAC? A "special purpose acquisition company" is a way for a company to go public without all the paperwork of a traditional IPO, or initial public offering. In an IPO, a company announces it wants to go public, then discloses a lot of details about its business operations. After that, investors put money into the company in exchange for shares. A SPAC flips that process around. Investors pool their money together first, with no idea what company they're investing in. The SPAC goes public as a shell company. The required disclosures are easier than those for a regular IPO, because a pile of money doesn't have any business operations to describe. Then, generally, the SPAC goes out and looks for a real company that wants to go public, and they merge together. The company gets the stock ticker and the pile of money much more quickly than through a normal IPO.
  2. ^ Broughton, Kristin; Maurer, Mark (September 22, 2020). "Why Finance Executives Choose SPACs: A Guide to the IPO Rival". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
  3. ^ "Blank Check Company". SEC.gov. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  4. ^ Ren, Shuli (March 8, 2021). "SPACs Are 'the Poor Man's Private Equity Funds'". Bloomberg Businessweek (4691): 72. ISSN 0007-7135. Retrieved 9 March 2021.
  5. ^ "Are SPAC mergers still a healthy option for tech companies aiming to go public?". KrASIA. 2022-03-23. Retrieved 2022-03-27.
  6. ^ Li, Yun (10 February 2021). "Unusual first-day rallies in SPACs raise bubble concern: 'Every single one of them has gone up'". CNBC. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  7. ^ Naumovska, Ivana (February 18, 2021). "The SPAC Bubble Is About to Burst". Harvard Business Review. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
  8. ^ "17 CFR § 230.419 - Offerings by blank check companies". LII / Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 2021-02-23.
  9. ^ Langager, Chad. "What are the fifth-letter identifiers on the Nasdaq?". Investopedia. Retrieved 2021-02-13.
  10. ^ "SPACs explained | Fidelity". www.fidelity.com. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
  11. ^ "Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC) – Definition". WGP Global.
  12. ^ a b "Underwriter League". SPAC Research. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  13. ^ a b "Completed Transactions". I-Bankers Securities. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  14. ^ "Special Purpose Acquisition Company Database | SPAC Research". SPAC Research. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  15. ^ a b "Data". www.afm.nl. Retrieved 2021-03-07.
  16. ^ "Mondo Visione - Worldwide Exchange Intelligence". mondovisione.com.
  17. ^ Cowie, Dawn (July 23, 2008). "Germany1 Acquisition raises $437.2 million". Wall Street Journal – via www.wsj.com.
  18. ^ Thomas, Daniel; Stafford, Philip (March 3, 2021). "UK listing rules set for overhaul in dash to catch Spacs wave". THE FINANCIAL TIMES LTD. Archived from the original on 2022-12-11. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  19. ^ BBC News (March 3, 2021). "Hill review: London takes aim at Amsterdam with new listing rules". BBC.co.uk. BBC. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  20. ^ "Hong Kong Tests the Waters with SPAC IPOs". thediplomat.com. Retrieved 2022-04-27.
  21. ^ "Trust Me". Forbes. Retrieved 2021-11-28.
  22. ^ Gara, Antoine (2014-08-27). "Ackman's Pershing Square a Quiet Winner in Burger King's Tim Hortons Deal". TheStreet.com. New York. Retrieved 2020-07-02.
  23. ^ Bill, Ackman (25 August 2014). "Ackman and Burger King". Bloomberg.com.
  24. ^ Bill, Ackman. "Bill Ackman invests $350 million in SPAC". Forbes.
  25. ^ Bill, Ackman (10 June 2015). "Ackman in Platform Specialty SPAC".
  26. ^ a b "Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC) Statistics | SPACInsider". SPACInsider. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  27. ^ DiNapoli, Jessica (May 31, 2022). "U.S. Senator Warren plans bill to crack down on blank check deals".
  28. ^ Warren, Elizabeth (2022-05-18). "The SPAC Hack: How SPACs Tilt the Playing Field and Enrich Wall Street Insiders" (PDF).
  29. ^ a b c "Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC) News | SPACInsider". SPACInsider. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
  30. ^ "US SEC set to require more transparency from 'blank check' companies". 2024-01-24.
  31. ^ SPAC Research, SPAC Market Trends, January 2019
  32. ^ "US SPAC IPO Issuance". SPACResearch.com. SPAC WIRE LLC. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  33. ^ Saldanha, Ruth (January 28, 2021). "SPACs Party Like It's 2020". Morningstar.com. Retrieved 2021-02-12.
  34. ^ Bain, Benjamin (11 March 2021). "SPAC Investment Returns Don't Match 'Hype,' SEC Chief Says". Bloomberg News. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  35. ^ "Was the SPAC Crash Predictable?". Yale Journal on Regulation. Retrieved 2023-09-08.
  36. ^ Kiesel, Florian; Klingelhöfer, Nico; Schiereck, Dirk; Vismara, Silvio (March 2023). "SPAC merger announcement returns and subsequent performance". European Financial Management. 29 (2): 399–420. doi:10.1111/eufm.12366. hdl:10446/226949. ISSN 1354-7798.

Bibliography edit

  • Feldman, David N. (2018). Regulation A+ and Other Alternatives to a Traditional IPO. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley. ISBN 9781119416166.
  • Klausner, Michael; Ohlrogge, Michael; Ruan, Emily (2021). "A Sober Look at SPACs". Stanford Law and Economics Olin Working Paper. 559.
  • Pollard, Troy (2016). "Sneaking in the back door? An evaluation of reverse mergers and IPOs". Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting. 47 (2): 305–341. doi:10.1007/s11156-015-0502-8. S2CID 54029302.
  • Sjostrom, W. K. Jr. (2007–2008). "The Truth About Reverse Mergers". Entrepreneurial Business Law Journal. 2: 743–751.

External links edit

  • Investopedia
  • Blank Check Company
  • Article about SPACs in the entertainment industry

special, purpose, acquisition, company, special, purpose, acquisition, company, spac, also, known, blank, check, company, shell, corporation, listed, stock, exchange, with, purpose, acquiring, merging, with, private, company, thus, making, private, company, pu. A special purpose acquisition company SPAC s p ae k also known as a blank check company is a shell corporation listed on a stock exchange with the purpose of acquiring or merging with a private company thus making the private company public without going through the initial public offering process which often carries significant procedural and regulatory burdens 1 2 According to the U S Securities and Exchange Commission SEC SPACs are created specifically to pool funds to finance a future merger or acquisition opportunity within a set timeframe these opportunities usually have yet to be identified while raising funds 3 In the U S SPACs are registered with the SEC and considered publicly traded companies The general public may buy their shares on stock exchanges before any merger or acquisition takes place For this reason they have at times been referred to as the poor man s private equity funds 4 The majority of companies pursuing SPACs do so on the Nasdaq or New York Stock Exchange in the US although other exchanges such as the Euronext Amsterdam Singapore Exchange and Hong Kong Stock Exchange have also overseen a small volume of SPAC deals 5 Despite the popularity and growth in the number of SPACs academic analysis shows investor returns on SPAC companies post merger are almost uniformly negative although investors in SPACs and merged companies may earn excess returns immediately after the merger 6 Proliferation of SPACs usually accelerates around periods of economic bubbles such as the everything bubble between 2020 and 2021 7 Contents 1 Characteristics 1 1 Mechanics 1 2 Governance 1 3 Management 1 4 Banking 1 5 SPACs in Europe 1 6 SPACs in Asia 1 7 SPACs in emerging markets 2 History 3 Regulation 3 1 Regulatory Developments 4 Statistics 5 Past performance 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksCharacteristics editMechanics edit SPACs generally trade as units or as separate common shares and warrants on the Nasdaq and New York Stock Exchange as of 2008 once the public offering has been declared effective by the SEC distinguishing the SPAC from a blank check company formed under SEC Rule 419 8 citation needed Commonly units are denoted with the letter u for unit appended to the ticker symbol of SPAC shares 9 Trading liquidity of the SPAC s securities provide investors with a flexible exit strategy In addition the public currency enhances the position of the SPAC when negotiating a business combination with a potential merger or acquisition target The common share price must be added to the trading price of the warrants to get an accurate picture of the SPAC s performance citation needed By market convention 85 to 100 of the proceeds raised in the IPO for the SPAC are held in trust to be used at a later date for the merger or acquisition 10 A SPAC s trust account can only be used to fund a shareholder approved business combination or to return capital to public shareholders at a charter extension or business combination approval meeting citation needed Each SPAC has its own liquidation window within which it must complete a merger or an acquisition past this deadline the SPAC will dissolve and return assets to its stockholders In practice SPAC sponsors often extend the life of a SPAC by making a contribution to the trust account to entice shareholders to vote in favor of a charter amendment that delays the liquidation date citation needed In addition the target of the acquisition must have a fair market value that is equal to at least 80 of the SPAC s net assets at the time of acquisition Previous SPAC structures required a positive shareholder vote by 80 of the SPAC s public shareholders for the transaction to be consummated 11 However current SPAC provisions do not require a shareholder vote for the transaction to be consummated unless as follows citation needed Type of transaction and shareholder approved required Purchase of assets No Purchase of stock of target not involving a merger with the company No Merger of target with a subsidiary of the company No Merger of the company with a target Yes Governance edit To allow for stockholders of the SPAC to make an informed decision on whether they wish to approve the business combination the company must make full disclosure to stockholders of the target business including complete audited financials and terms of the proposed business combination via an SEC merger proxy statement All common share stockholders of the SPAC are granted voting rights at a shareholder meeting to approve or reject the proposed business combination A number of SPACs have also been placed on the London Stock Exchange AIM exchange These SPACs do not have the aforementioned voting thresholds citation needed Since the financial crisis when which protections for common shareholders have been implemented allowing stockholders to vote in favor of a deal and still redeem their shares for a pro rata share of the trust account This is significantly different from the blind pool blank check companies of the 1980s which were a form of limited partnership that did not specify what investment opportunities the company plans to pursue The assets of the trust are only released if a business combination is approved by the voting shareholders or a business combination is not consummated within the amount of time allowed by a company s articles of incorporation citation needed Management edit The SPAC is usually led by a management team composed of three or more members with prior private equity mergers and acquisitions and or operating experience The management team of a SPAC typically receives 20 of the equity in the vehicle at the time of offering exclusive of the value of the warrants The equity is usually held in escrow for two to three years and management normally agrees to purchase warrants or units from the company in a private placement immediately prior to the offering The proceeds from this sponsor investment usually equal to between 2 and 8 of the amount being raised in the public offering are placed in the trust and distributed to public stockholders in the event of liquidation citation needed No salaries finder s fees or other cash compensation are paid to the management team prior to the business combination and the management team does not participate in a liquidating distribution if it fails to consummate a successful business combination In many cases management teams agree to pay for the expenses in excess of the trusts if there is a liquidation of the SPAC because no target has been found Conflicts of interest are minimized within the SPAC structure because all management teams agree to offer suitable prospective target businesses to the SPAC before any other acquisition fund subject to pre existing fiduciary duties The SPAC is further prohibited from consummating a business combination with any entity affiliated with an insider unless a fairness opinion from an independent investment banking firm states that the combination is fair to the shareholders citation needed Banking edit SPAC Research an entity running a SPAC database maintains an underwriter league table which can be sorted by bookrunner volume or other criteria for any year or selection of years 12 As of January 2021 update I Bankers Securities Inc stated that it had participated in 132 SPAC IPOs as lead or co manager since 2004 13 In the years leading up to 2021 bulge bracket banks started participating in more SPAC IPOs with Cantor Fitzgerald amp Co and Deutsche Bank Securities Inc on the cover of 30 SPAC IPOs from 2015 to August 2019 14 Citigroup Credit Suisse Goldman Sachs and BofA have all built a significant SPAC practice while Cantor Fitzgerald led all SPAC underwriters in 2019 by book running 14 SPACs that raised over US 3 08 billion in IPO proceeds 12 SPACs in Europe edit In July 2007 Pan European Hotel Acquisition Company N V was the first SPAC offering listed on the Euronext Amsterdam raising approximately 115 million I Bankers Securities has been the underwriter with CRT Capital Group as lead underwriter 15 16 That listing on NYSE Euronext Amsterdam was followed by Liberty International Acquisition Company raising 600 million in January 2008 Liberty is the third largest SPAC in the world and the largest outside the U S The first German SPAC was Germany1 Acquisition Ltd which raised 437 2 million at Euronext Amsterdam with Deutsche Bank and I Bankers Securities as underwriters 17 13 Loyens amp Loeff served as legal counsels in The Netherlands 15 In March 2021 a report prepared by Lord Hill for the Chancellor of Exchequer recommended a series of changes to London company listing rules to make them more favorable to SPAC listings 18 Among the report s proposals is to reduce the percentage of shares that must be offered to the public from 25 to 15 19 SPACs in Asia edit On March 18 2022 Aquila Acquisition Corp debuted on the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited HKEX The IPO received lukewarm reception by investors with shares down 3 in the two week period post IPO Despite this decrease there is a high demand for SPAC public offerings in Hong Kong with HKEX reporting that they have received applications for 11 additional SPAC IPOs 20 SPACs in emerging markets edit Emerging market focused SPACs particularly those seeking to consummate a business combination in China have been incorporating a 30 36 month timeline to account for the additional time that it has taken previous similar entities to successfully open their business combinations citation needed History editSince the 1990s SPACs have existed in the technology healthcare logistics media retail and telecommunications industries Their history began with investment bank GKN Securities specifically founders David Nussbaum 21 Roger Gladstone and Robert Gladstone who later founded EarlyBirdCapital with Steve Levine and David Miller currently managing partner of Graubard Miller law firm and who developed the template citation needed The success of SPACs in building equity value for their shareholders has drawn interest from investors such as Bill Ackman who had backed three SPACs as of 2015 including the SPAC that took Burger King public 22 23 24 25 SPAC IPOs have experienced drastic fluctuations since 2009 peaking in 2021 with 162 503 billion raised SPAC IPOs in the United States 26 IPO Year IPO Count Gross Public Proceeds in billions 2009 1 0 036 2010 7 0 503 2011 15 1 082 2012 9 0 491 2013 10 1 455 2014 12 1 750 2015 20 3 902 2016 13 3 499 2017 34 10 048 2018 46 10 752 2019 59 13 608 2020 248 83 380 2021 613 162 503 2022 86 13 431 2023 31 3 848 2024 4 0 511 nbsp Graph diagram of the number of IPO companies which used SPAC to go public 26 As of 29 February 2024 update Regulation editIn the US the SPAC public offering structure is governed by the Securities and Exchange Commission SEC A public offering for a SPAC is typically filed with the SEC under an S 1 registration statement or an F 1 for a foreign private issuer and is classified by the SEC under SIC code 6770 Blank Checks Full disclosure of the SPAC structure target industries or geographic regions management team biographies share ownership potential conflicts of interest and risk factors are standard material covered in the S 1 registration statement It is believed that the SEC has studied SPACs to determine whether they require special regulations to ensure that these vehicles are not abused as blind pool trusts clarification needed and blank check corporations have been over the years Many who believe that SPACs do have corporate governance mechanisms in place to protect shareholders SPACs listed on the American Stock Exchange are required to be Sarbanes Oxley compliant at the time of the offering including such mandatory requirements as a majority of the board of directors being independent and having audit and compensation committees citation needed Regulatory Developments edit In 2022 Elizabeth Warren released a report showing that Wall Street insiders were using SPACs in ways that harmed investors and called for regulations to curb the abuse 27 28 On January 24th 2024 the SEC unveiled new rules for Special Purpose Acquisition Companies SPACs introducing clarifications to enhance regulatory transparency and integrity without significantly altering the existing framework Critical updates include maintaining the current stance on SPACs under the 40 Act and the definition of banks as underwriters while refining the criteria for forward looking statements by redefining blank check company and eliminating one safe harbor provision 29 Additionally the SEC has encouraged more realistic management projections for DeSPAC transactions and required detailed disclosures on board votes and the dilutive impacts of compensation and securities issuances 29 These developments aim to enhance transparency and integrity within the SPAC ecosystem reflecting a cautious approach to regulation without fundamentally altering existing practices 29 Warren commended the SEC on the new rules 30 Statistics editAccording to an industry study published in January 2019 from 2004 through 2018 approximately 49 14 billion was raised across 332 SPAC IPOs in the US In that period 2018 was the largest year for SPAC issuance since 2007 with 46 SPAC IPOs raising approximately 10 74 billion SPACs seeking an acquisition in the energy sector raised 1 4bn in 2018 after raising a record 3 9bn in 2017 NASDAQ was the most common listing exchange for SPACs in 2018 with 34 SPACs raising 6 4bn GS Acquisition Holdings Corp and Churchill Capital Corp raised the largest SPACs of 2018 with 690mm each in IPO proceeds 31 In 2019 59 SPAC IPO s raised 13 6 billion 32 Nearly 250 SPACs raised more than 83 billion in 2020 In the first month of 2021 there were 75 SPACs 33 In a March 2020 event Allison Lee acting chair of the SEC said that the investment returns don t match the hype surrounding the SPAC bubble 34 Past performance editA study found that as of the 1st of December 2022 American listed SPACs that completed their mergers between July 2020 and December 2021 had a mean share price of 3 85 This constitutes a fall of over 60 from the standard 10 per share that SPAC shareholders could have received if they redeemed their shares The study also found that The average post merger SPAC during this period underperformed the average traditional IPO by 26 35 Another study focusing on a longer timeframe of U S SPACs from December 2012 until June 2021 found average stock price decreases of 14 1 after 1 year of the merger announcement and 18 after 2 years 36 See also editCapital formation Direct listing Initial public offering Reverse IPO Special purpose entityReferences edit Domonoske Camila 2020 12 29 The Spectacular Rise Of SPACs The Backwards IPO That s Taking Over Wall Street NPR Archived from the original on 2021 02 22 So what is a SPAC A special purpose acquisition company is a way for a company to go public without all the paperwork of a traditional IPO or initial public offering In an IPO a company announces it wants to go public then discloses a lot of details about its business operations After that investors put money into the company in exchange for shares A SPAC flips that process around Investors pool their money together first with no idea what company they re investing in The SPAC goes public as a shell company The required disclosures are easier than those for a regular IPO because a pile of money doesn t have any business operations to describe Then generally the SPAC goes out and looks for a real company that wants to go public and they merge together The company gets the stock ticker and the pile of money much more quickly than through a normal IPO Broughton Kristin Maurer Mark September 22 2020 Why Finance Executives Choose SPACs A Guide to the IPO Rival The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 22 February 2021 Blank Check Company SEC gov U S Securities and Exchange Commission Retrieved 26 August 2020 Ren Shuli March 8 2021 SPACs Are the Poor Man s Private Equity Funds Bloomberg Businessweek 4691 72 ISSN 0007 7135 Retrieved 9 March 2021 Are SPAC mergers still a healthy option for tech companies aiming to go public KrASIA 2022 03 23 Retrieved 2022 03 27 Li Yun 10 February 2021 Unusual first day rallies in SPACs raise bubble concern Every single one of them has gone up CNBC Retrieved 18 February 2021 Naumovska Ivana February 18 2021 The SPAC Bubble Is About to Burst Harvard Business Review Retrieved 22 February 2021 17 CFR 230 419 Offerings by blank check companies LII Legal Information Institute Retrieved 2021 02 23 Langager Chad What are the fifth letter identifiers on the Nasdaq Investopedia Retrieved 2021 02 13 SPACs explained Fidelity www fidelity com Retrieved 2021 02 26 Special Purpose Acquisition Company SPAC Definition WGP Global a b Underwriter League SPAC Research Retrieved 18 January 2021 a b Completed Transactions I Bankers Securities Retrieved 18 January 2021 Special Purpose Acquisition Company Database SPAC Research SPAC Research Retrieved 27 March 2022 a b Data www afm nl Retrieved 2021 03 07 Mondo Visione Worldwide Exchange Intelligence mondovisione com Cowie Dawn July 23 2008 Germany1 Acquisition raises 437 2 million Wall Street Journal via www wsj com Thomas Daniel Stafford Philip March 3 2021 UK listing rules set for overhaul in dash to catch Spacs wave THE FINANCIAL TIMES LTD Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 3 March 2021 BBC News March 3 2021 Hill review London takes aim at Amsterdam with new listing rules BBC co uk BBC Retrieved 3 March 2021 Hong Kong Tests the Waters with SPAC IPOs thediplomat com Retrieved 2022 04 27 Trust Me Forbes Retrieved 2021 11 28 Gara Antoine 2014 08 27 Ackman s Pershing Square a Quiet Winner in Burger King s Tim Hortons Deal TheStreet com New York Retrieved 2020 07 02 Bill Ackman 25 August 2014 Ackman and Burger King Bloomberg com Bill Ackman Bill Ackman invests 350 million in SPAC Forbes Bill Ackman 10 June 2015 Ackman in Platform Specialty SPAC a b Special Purpose Acquisition Company SPAC Statistics SPACInsider SPACInsider Retrieved 29 February 2024 DiNapoli Jessica May 31 2022 U S Senator Warren plans bill to crack down on blank check deals Warren Elizabeth 2022 05 18 The SPAC Hack How SPACs Tilt the Playing Field and Enrich Wall Street Insiders PDF a b c Special Purpose Acquisition Company SPAC News SPACInsider SPACInsider Retrieved 26 February 2024 US SEC set to require more transparency from blank check companies 2024 01 24 SPAC Research SPAC Market Trends January 2019 US SPAC IPO Issuance SPACResearch com SPAC WIRE LLC Retrieved 27 June 2020 Saldanha Ruth January 28 2021 SPACs Party Like It s 2020 Morningstar com Retrieved 2021 02 12 Bain Benjamin 11 March 2021 SPAC Investment Returns Don t Match Hype SEC Chief Says Bloomberg News Retrieved 13 March 2021 Was the SPAC Crash Predictable Yale Journal on Regulation Retrieved 2023 09 08 Kiesel Florian Klingelhofer Nico Schiereck Dirk Vismara Silvio March 2023 SPAC merger announcement returns and subsequent performance European Financial Management 29 2 399 420 doi 10 1111 eufm 12366 hdl 10446 226949 ISSN 1354 7798 Bibliography editFeldman David N 2018 Regulation A and Other Alternatives to a Traditional IPO Hoboken New Jersey Wiley ISBN 9781119416166 Klausner Michael Ohlrogge Michael Ruan Emily 2021 A Sober Look at SPACs Stanford Law and Economics Olin Working Paper 559 Pollard Troy 2016 Sneaking in the back door An evaluation of reverse mergers and IPOs Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting 47 2 305 341 doi 10 1007 s11156 015 0502 8 S2CID 54029302 Sjostrom W K Jr 2007 2008 The Truth About Reverse Mergers Entrepreneurial Business Law Journal 2 743 751 External links editInvestopedia Blank Check Company Article about SPACs in the entertainment industry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Special purpose acquisition company amp oldid 1223238789, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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