SPAC Liquidations on the Rise as Time Runs Out to Find Deals

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So far this year, 21 SPACs worth $9.9 billion have been liquidated, according to SPAC Research’s weekly monitor. More than half of these liquidations — 11 — have occurred since August, Instutional Investor reports.

Last week billionaire investor Chamath Palihapitiya, whom Bloomberg once crowned the “King of SPACs,” disclosed in a regulatory filing that he would liquidate two that had failed to find a merger partner and would return $1.6 billion to investors next month. The two-year time period for the two SPACS to find a partner ends in early October. 

In August, even though a SPAC Palihapitiya sponsored with hedge fund Suvretta Capital managed to complete a deal with Akili Interactive, 99 percent of the original investors redeemed when the deal closed. The stock now trades below $2.50 per share, down from a high of $14 right before the deal. 

A liquidation may also be in the cards for Donald Trump’s SPAC. A vote on an extension of time to complete the deal between Digital World Acquisition Corp. and Trump Media and Technology Group earlier this month failed to find enough investors to pass, leading it to be delayed twice. Since then, Digital World rescheduled the vote for Oct. 10, but that did not stop some of its investors from pulling their financing. Digital World disclosed Monday that private investors had pulled $138.5 million of the $1 billion needed to fund the company after the merger. 

The Trump SPAC is dominated by retail investors, and getting enough of them to vote has been difficult, even though there is a subReddit with 18.5 thousand members promoting the stock — and encouraging them to vote.

Thirteen other SPACs are set to hold votes on extensions by November 1. 

As of late August, there were 256 SPACs that had already been searching for a partner for 18 months, which translates into almost 50 percent of all outstanding SPACs prowling for a merger.

These SPACs went public during the heady first quarter of 2021. Under the SEC’s proposed SPAC rules, which are expected to be finalized soon, SPACs would need to announce a deal within18 months of the IPO and close within 24 months to avoid being considered a company under the Investment Company Act and subject to its tougher regulations. Read more.

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