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SPACs – Why Investors Should Be Cautious

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Dr. David Kass
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SMITH BRAIN TRUST – This year, special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, seem to be all the rage, as companies seek to go public while bypassing the initial public offering process. But, be wary, Maryland Smith’s David Kass advises.

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While SPACs do offer investors an opportunity to invest in a startup’s early days, things that seem too good to be true frequently are.

“SPACs offer an opportunity for investors to get in early on a young company and earn a much higher return. However, with that higher potential return comes much higher risk,” says Kass, clinical professor of finance at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business. “One thing we teach in finance is the tradeoff between risk and return. And that very much applies with SPACs.”

The risk that SPACs pose is that they serve essentially as a blank check company, Kass says. In most cases, investors are handing over money for intermediaries to spend on their behalf with little to no information about the company. But the people who really come out on top are the promoters and intermediaries putting the mergers together, Kass says.

“The promoters who raise funds from investors stand to gain enormous fees from facilitating these negotiations and serving as middlemen between parties as well as receiving large stakes in the companies merged with the SPACs at very little cost,” says Kass. “They have all the incentive for completing these deals because it’s the investors who assume almost all of the risk.”

If a SPAC fails to take a company public, investors can expect to recoup their initial investment usually within two years.

“The formal Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approval process for Initial Public Offering (IPO) involves more people, generally investment bankers exercising due diligence, and takes place over a longer period of time, as opposed to a SPAC,” says Kass. “But what you get is someone proverbially kicking the tires and ensuring the process follows accordingly, much like getting verification during a used car sale.”

So far this year, a stunning $54 billion has been raised by SPACs listed in the United States, more than three times the previous record.

Among the largest: DraftKings, an online betting firm, merged with a SPAC in April with a valuation of $3.3 billion and was later taken public. It is now valued at over $15 billion. But for every DraftKings, there are many more unsuccessful SPAC deals. Since 2015, of the 313 SPAC deals launched, only 93 have completed mergers and gone public, according to Renaissance Capital. Of those, only 29 have yielded positive returns.

“For smaller, less experienced investors, it’s really important to understand the risks involved with investing in SPACs. Based on previous results, you could argue that it’s a negative expected return,” says Kass.

“If you’re lucky, one or two of these SPACs could work out and yield incredible gains, but the probability is very low and you could find yourself losing a lot of money because of this fad.”

Article by Dr. David Kass

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David I Kass Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Finance Ph.D., Harvard University Robert H. Smith School of Business 4412 Van Munching Hall University of Maryland College Park, MD 20742-1815 Phone: 301-405-9683 Email: [email protected] (link sends e-mail) Dr. David Kass has published articles in corporate finance, industrial organization, and health economics. He currently teaches Advanced Financial Management and Business Finance, and is the Faculty Champion for the Accelerated Finance Fellows. Prior to joining the faculty of the Smith School in 2004, he held senior positions with the Federal Government (Federal Trade Commission, General Accounting Office, Department of Defense, and the Bureau of Economic Analysis). Dr. Kass has recently appeared on Bloomberg TV, CNBC, PBS Nightly Business Report, Maryland Public Television, Business News Network TV (Canada), Fox TV, American Public Media's Marketplace Radio, and WYPR Radio (Baltimore), and has been quoted on numerous occasions by Bloomberg News and The Wall Street Journal, where he has primarily discussed Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway. He has also launched a Smith School “Warren Buffett” blog. Dr. Kass has accompanied MBA students on trips to Omaha for private meetings with Warren Buffett, and Finance Fellows to Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meetings. He is an officer of the Harvard Business School Club of Washington, DC, and is a member of the investment and budget committees of a local nonprofit organization. Dr. Kass received a Smith School “Top 15% Teaching Award” for the 2009-2010 academic year.