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SPACs – What Are They & How Do They Work?

Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs) have become a hot topic, though they have been around for some time. Over the last year, use of SPACs to go public has skyrocketed, becoming the preferred way for many to take their company public. In the midst of this SPAC boom, it is important to understand what it is and how it works before you decide it’s what your company needs.

What is a SPAC?

A SPAC involves a shell company formed to raise capital in an IPO with the intent to use the proceeds to acquire a private company or its asset(s). SPACs will go through the typical registration process of a new listing: filing a registration statement, clearing SEC comments, and undergoing a firm underwriting. The SPAC will then offer its securities to investors via an IPO and place the cash raised into a trust to fund the purchase of the target company. At some point during all of this, the companies will negotiate the final terms of the merger or purchase agreement and get any shareholder or board approval needed, as they would with any other acquisition (historically, the SEC has required that SPACs not identify a target company prior to its IPO, but pre-IPO identification has become increasingly common since 2009). At the end of all this, the private company is owned by the public company, making it a public entity. 

What are the Benefits?

SPACs are praised largely for their timeliness and cost effectiveness. Unlike a traditional IPO, which is costly to the private company and can take months or even years to complete, a SPAC typically has minimal costs to the private company, can take as little as a few months, and provides companies with access to capital. For companies that do not want to go through the red tape of an IPO on their own or are in need of a little capital infusion, a SPAC can be the perfect solution. 

What are the Potential Problems?

While SPACs can be cheaper and faster than a traditional IPO, they are not free. There is a cost, both in money and in time, which means that they are not an immediate answer to a company in need of capital. As with any IPO, the shell company will incur fees and expenses with its IPO, and while a SPAC can take as little as eight to ten weeks, it can also take five months or more to put together. 

Cost

As we noted earlier, SPACs are not free. The cost associated with the IPO is typically taken care of by the public company, but it could also be negotiated and shared between the parties. There is also the possibility that the SPAC will not raise enough capital through the IPO to fund the intended acquisition. In this event, the SPAC will need to arrange debt or equity financing, such as a public investment in private equity (PIPE). Unintended delays that increase costs and insufficient capital are possibilities to keep in mind when considering a SPAC. 

Time

In addition to the financial burden, SPACS can require a heavy time investment. Most people will tell you that they only take 2-6 months, but the time it takes to complete the transaction itself (the IPO and the acquisition) can vary, and the work does not end when the paperwork is signed. Many overlook the time investment that the due diligence and negotiations leading up to the transaction require, and even after the transaction is finalized, both companies still have responsibilities that are often overlooked in the timeline, like notifying shareholders and employees of the change and what it means for them, filing additional paperwork with the SEC, etc. It is not unusual for it to take twenty-four months to complete the business combination with the target company

Is a SPAC Right for My Company?

Asking this question (or reading blog posts like this) shows you are already on the right track. SPACs are not right for every company, and this question of whether it is right for your company specifically is, unfortunately, not one we can answer in a blog post. But if you go into a SPAC fully aware of its consequences for your company and willing to accept them, you will find yourself on the right track.  

If you need help understanding what undergoing a SPAC transaction would mean for your company and whether it is right for your specific situation, we would love to help you. At the Law Offices of Destiny Aigbe, we are dedicated to our securities law practice and helping you find success. Let us know how we can help you find success today. 

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