SPAC Costs ‘Far Higher’ Than Previously Known, Study Finds

Although SPACs typically raise $10 per share from investors in their IPOs, by the time the median SPAC merges with a target, it holds just $6.67 in cash for each outstanding share, according to a study published and updated this month by Stanford Law School.

The study shows that “for a large majority of SPACs, post-merger share prices fall, and second, that these price drops are highly correlated with the extent of dilution, or cash shortfall, in a SPAC. This implies that SPAC investors are bearing the cost of the dilution built into the SPAC structure, and in effect subsidizing the companies they bring public.” The researchers question whether this is a sustainable situation. Read more.

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SEC Charges Trump-Tied Digital World Acquisition with Misleading Investors

Digital World will pay an $18 million penalty if it completes the deal, the SEC said. As part of the settlement, DWAC also affirmed that future filings with the regulator would be "materially complete and accurate." The SPAC is facing a Sept. 8 deadline for completing the merger, though it contends that it may extend the runway by an additional 12 months -- which Trump's media company reportedly disputes.