Insights, Private & Public Restructuring and Reorganisations, Capital Markets

Going Public Through Special Purpose Acquisition Vehicle (SPAC)

Special purpose acquisition vehicle (SPAC) is regarded as a “blank check” company without any business interest or performance history, set up specifically for raising capital from the public for the purpose of acquiring a target company. A company can go public through the traditional initial public offering (IPO), or through the novel option of a merger with a (SPAC). The SPAC undertakes the IPO and subsequently merges with the target company.

A SPAC usually has between 18 to 24 months to acquire a company or return the funds to investors. At formation and IPO stages, the SPAC need not identify any target company but only an industry where the acquisition will take place. SPAC as an innovation officially debuted in 2003, although the framework was first devised in 1993 by the Investment banker David Nusssbaum assisted by lawyer David Miller, at a time when blank check companies were prohibited in the US…

 

 

To read the full article, kindly download the PDF

Ifeoma Ezeribe

Managing Associate

Practice Key Contacts

More To Read

29/08/2024
Fuelling Nigeria’s Future: A Roadmap for Domestic Gas Pricing And Regulation (Part 2)

Introduction In Part 1 of this article series on Nigeria’s evolving gas pricing mechanism, we discussed the foundational principles guiding Domestic Base Pricing (DBP) in

26/08/2024
Zhongshan Fucheng Industrial Investment Company Ltd. v. Nigeria: How the Concept of Attribution applies in International Investment Arbitration

Introduction: On 14th August 2024, Nigerians woke up to the news of the seizure of three (3) Nigeria’s presidential jets, as ordered by a French