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A SPAC is a high-risk but potentially profitable way to get in on the ground floor of a new stock

richard branson virgin galactic ipo spac
Sir Richard Branson on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange as his SPAC-sponsored Virgin Galactic begins public trading in October 2019.
  • A Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC) is a company created solely to merge or acquire another business and take it public — a faster alternative to an initial public offering.
  • Investors essentially write blank checks to SPACs, which can take up to two years to target and buy another firm.
  • SPACs offer individual investors the chance to get in on the ground floor of a potentially big stock, but are also highly risky.

SPAC pros and cons

Like any investment, SPACs have advantages and disadvantages.

Advantages of SPACs

  • They're cheap. Many SPACs are priced at $10 a share, well within reach of retail investors. And they stay low for a while. "SPAC IPOs on average don't jump on the first day of trading," notes Jay R. Ritter, the Joseph B. Cordell Eminent Scholar Chair at the University of Florida's Warrington College of Business, who researches IPOs. "The average increase this year on the first day of trading has been 1.7%, so buying in the market might mean paying $10.17 or so."
  • They invest in hot areas. The new breed of SPACs focuses on sexy sectors in the tech or consumer fields. Promising startups like Opendoor, Clover Health, and electric automaker Nikola are among the firms that have gone public via SPACs.
  • They're open to individual investors. Even though institutional investors usually go to the front of the line for SPAC offerings, the high number of shares sold makes it easier for smaller investors to get a piece of the action. 

Disadvantages of SPACs

  • Blind investment. SPAC investors usually don't know how their money will be used — what the SPAC's target company is (often the sponsors don't know either). So the deal's impossible to evaluate.
  • Lag time. There can be a long lag between the time investors pump money into a SPAC and when it actually buys up a company and starts operations. Your money may sit for up to two years in an escrow account. If no acquisition happens, your funds are returned, but idling capital for that long may be painful.
  • Mixed track record. In a July 2020 report, Goldman Sachs analyzed the performance of 56 SPACs — primarily in the technology, industrials, energy, and financial segments — that "merged" with their target companies beginning in January 2018. "During the one-month and three-month periods following the acquisition announcement, the average SPAC outperformed the S&P 500 by 1 percentage point (pp) and 11 pp, respectively, and beat the Russell 2000 by 6 pp and 15 pp, respectively," the report notes. "However, the average SPAC underperformed both indexes during the 3, 6, and 12-months after the merger completion."

Of course, some SPACs do better than that. For example, Virgin Galactic Holdings (SPCE) — a particularly high-profile offering — has appreciated 146% in the year since it went public via a SPAC in October 2019. 

How to invest in SPACS

Getting into a SPAC is not as simple as buying regular equities: Hedge funds, mutual funds, and other deep-pocketed institutional investors typically find out about a new SPAC first. "It helps if a would-be investor has an existing relationship with a SPAC sponsor," says Gellasch. 

But if Michael Jordan isn't among your contacts, there are other ways to break into the world of SPACs:

  • Your friendly stockbroker or wealth manager. Ask them to keep an eye out for offerings
  •  The websites of IPO-oriented investment banks. One SPAC specialist, Early Bird Capital, lists companies that are actively seeking targets.
  •  The NASDAQ website also lists upcoming IPOs, including SPACs, which can be identified by a ticker symbol that generally ends with a "U."
  •  Industry associations like SPAC Research sometimes highlight S-1 filings, which give formal notice of a SPAC's intention to go public. 

The financial takeaway

A SPAC is definitely not "a 'widows and orphans' investment," according to Gellasch. "For one thing, you may be tying up your money for a year or more without knowing what the ultimate investment will be. The sponsor and institutional investors may know — at least generally — what they're looking to do with the funds, but the small investor will likely be in the dark."

"Until a deal is announced, the investor is just hoping that a good merger will happen," Ritter adds. And of course, there are no guarantees as to returns after it does. SPACs are speculative animals. They tend to acquire growth companies — start-ups and fledgling firms — which, by their nature, are higher-risk than, say, established blue-chip companies.

Still, SPACs offer smaller investors a way to get into the IPO game — if not up in front with the big players, at least not too far behind them.

Read the original article on Business Insider


source https://www.businessinsider.com/personal-finance/what-is-a-spac

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