The SPAC Party Gets Going in Europe, This Time With Better Terms

Posted by  The Chairman 

Source
BloombergQuint
by: Alex Webb 

Published on: May 24th, 2021, 9:31AM

Last Updated: on May 24th 2021, 12:16 PM
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By now we all know just how U.S. investors went crazy for SPACs at the turn of the year, pumping $90 billion into the special purpose acquisition companies from December through February alone.

Blank-check companies raise money from investors in an initial public offering and then merge with a company that’s itself looking to go public. The targets get a wad of cash while avoiding the rigmarole of their own IPO. The method allowed a slew of companies to soar to multibillion-dollar valuations even though they had no revenue, from Richard Branson’s space tourism company Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc. to electric truck maker Nikola Corp.
 
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission damped the frenzy with a series of announcements in March that warned about celebrity-endorsed SPACs (Shaq, A-Rod, and Jay-Z had all joined the party), noting that VIP involvement in a SPAC doesn’t mean it’s a wise investment. The deluge of low-quality SPACs and their subsequent poor stock market performance didn’t help, and investment in blank-check companies tumbled 89% that month from February to $4.2 billion.

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