Ripples Following the SPAC Wave: Litigation and Regulatory Risks

It’s a pattern we often see in boom-and-bust cycles—disputes rising in the period after a wave crests, Proskauer writes.

SPAC deal volume hit an unprecedented high in 2021, but then slowed down in 2022 alongside IPOs. However, the fallout from the SPAC wave will continue to unfold this year, generating increased regulatory attention and a growing number of disputes.

Although the market has cooled, the SEC is examining historical practices by advisers who sponsored SPACs during the recent SPAC boom. The SEC’s 2023 exam priorities include a focus on advisers that sponsored SPACs.

Meanwhile, Delaware’s Chancery Court reamins busy adujdicating de-SPAC transactions. Read more.

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ICR’s SPAC Market Update Shows Normalization

The SPAC IPO market seems to have normalized, with six SPAC IPOs pricing during the first quarter, of which over 30% were from serial sponsors that returned to the market. These serial sponsors elected to raise larger trusts, increasing average SPAC IPO size for Q1 to $114 million, up 2% from Q4 2023 and 39% from the same quarter last year.