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July 5, 2024

SPACs Updates: Disclosure Rules Effective & New DRS FAQ

This week, concurrently with the effectiveness of the SEC’s new SPAC disclosure rules on July 1, the SEC updated some website resources related to SPACs, including posting this Small Entity Compliance Guide for SPACs, Shell Companies and Projections. It also updated these FAQs on Voluntary Submission of Draft Registration Statements to add this new question 19 on de-SPACs & co-registrant status:

Question: If a registrant uses the confidential submission process to submit a draft registration statement in connection with a de-SPAC transaction, when should it include any co-registrant’s CIK and related submission information in EDGAR Filing Interface?

Answer: EDGAR does not currently allow the entry of a co-registrant on draft registration statement submissions. See Section 7.2.1 Accessing the EDGARLink Online Submission of the EDGAR Filer Manual. Therefore, the primary registrant should submit the draft registration statement without the co-registrant’s CIK and related submission information. The draft registration statement must contain the information required by the applicable registration statement form, including required information about the target company. The primary registrant must add the co-registrant’s CIK and related submission information in EDGAR when it publicly files the registration statement. See Section 7.3.3.1 Entering Submission Information of the EDGAR Filer Manual. Co-registrants do not need to separately submit the draft registration statements or related correspondence in EDGAR since the primary registrant’s reporting history will include all draft registration statement submissions and related correspondence.

As John noted earlier this week on DealLawyers.com, many people assumed that the new disclosure rules would be the last nail in the coffin for SPAC deals, but he had this positive news to share:

This Institutional Investor article says that the SPAC market is actually perking up a bit:

“More than two years after they were first proposed, the Securities and Exchange Commission’s new rules governing special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, finally are set to go into effect on July 1. The expectation of tougher requirements, along with the disastrous stock market performance of most SPACS, has already led this market to sink — but it hasn’t killed it. In fact, 2024 is on pace to outdo 2023, which was the worst year for SPACs since 2016, in terms of dollars raised through the IPO market, according to SPAC Insider.

Halfway through this year, SPACs have already raised $2.5 billion, compared with $3.8 billion for the entirety of 2023, according to SPAC Insider. It calculates that are 34 SPACS that have either filed to go public, are searching for a merger partner or have completed a deal, compared with 42 for all of 2023, The average size of the SPAC IPO is slightly bigger, too, at $156.5 million compared with $124.1 million in 2023.”

The article also highlights the significant headwinds that SPACs are facing, including the difficulties many SPACs have experienced in finding a merger partner and the shortened timeframe they have to complete a deSPAC under the SEC’s new rules.  Still, while SPACs are certainly ailing, it does appear that they would be right to claim, like the old man in Monty Python and the Holy Grail, that “I’m not dead yet!”

Meredith Ervine

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