- In Feb 2021, I wrote an article warning people about frenzies in the IPO and SPAC markets (posted here)
- I cited a working paper that said, ‘We find, first, that for a large majority of SPACs, postmerger share prices fall’ reference here
- In May of 2021, the SEC took the extraordinary step of warning investors about SPACs reference here.
- Last Friday, the Wall Street Journal published an article stating that 50% of companies that finished a SPAC deal in 2021 and 2022 are down 40% or more.
An article in the Wall Street Journal published last Friday caught my attention. The article was titled, ‘The SPAC Ship is Sinking. Investors Want Their Money Back.’ The article requires a subscription and can be found here. WSJ noted that more then half of the SPAC deals completed in 2021 and 2022 are down over 40%. ‘The SPAC Ship is Sinking’? I wonder, did it ever float to begin with?
The WSJ article stated that $240 Billion dollars had been raised for SPAC deals in 2021 and 2022. SPACs are Special Purpose Acquisition Companies that are used to bypass IPO securities regulations. SPAC have a number of elements that make them incredibly undesirable. Sponsors take a very large cut of the deal for promoting a deal. This dilutes investors ownership interests. Investors were bidding up shares even before knowing if the SPAC would complete a deal to take public. The English expression, ‘a pig in a poke’ comes to mind. Farmers would sell buyers what they thought was a piglet in a bag (a poke). Instead of selling a pig, they would insert a kitten. ‘Letting the cat out of the bag’ is to expose the scheme.
Unfortunately from some many investors that did not do their homework, they did indeed buy a ‘pig in a poke’.