SEC approves tougher rules for blank-check deals

SEC approves tougher rules for blank-check deals
After surging during the pandemic, SPACs have fallen out of favor, and the agency's new rules could further reduce investor interest.
JAN 24, 2024

Wall Street’s main regulator is demanding more investor protections for deals involving special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, tightening rules on a once-popular pathway for taking firms public. 

After surging during the Covid-19 pandemic as an alternative to traditional initial public offerings, blank-check companies have fallen out of favor. In a move that could further reduce interest, the Securities and Exchange Commission approved new rules Wednesday to make SPAC deals more like traditional IPOs — driving up legal risks and costs for those behind the transactions.  

Blank-check companies, which list on public stock exchanges to raise money so they can buy other companies, were touted as a faster and potentially cheaper way to do a public listing. But critics have long warned that deals can be rife with conflicts of interest and amount to an end-run of the traditional IPO process.

“Just because a company uses an alternative method to go public does not mean that its investors are any less deserving of time-tested investor protections,” SEC Chair Gary Gensler said ahead of a vote on the plan. 

The regulations, which were first proposed in March 2022, revoke legal protections that shielded sponsors of the deals from getting sued by investors over embellished statements. They require the later part of the transaction, the so-called de-SPAC, to include more disclosures around forward-looking projections.

Even without the new rules in place, the once white-hot market for SPACs fizzled as the SEC’s enforcement division stepped up scrutiny and interest-rate increases damped demand for risky investments. Just a few dozen blank-check companies went public last year after hundreds did so in the 2021 heyday, according to data from SPAC Research.

After the SEC proposed its rule changes, underwriters including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Bank of America Corp. pulled back on their services for the market within a matter of months.

The SEC is providing guidance on when it will consider firms to be underwriters, according to the agency. SPAC sponsors, frequently hedge funds, private equity firms and venture capital investors, also have to reveal more information about their identities, conflicts of interest, dilution and compensation under the new rules. 

Mark Uyeda, one of the SEC’s two Republican commissioners, said the new rules were simply intended to quash the SPAC market for good. “In order to achieve this desired outcome, the commission seeks to impose crushingly burdensome disclosure regulation on SPACs as a form of merit regulation in guise,” he said in a statement for the meeting to vote on the plan.

A company that’s targeted by a SPAC will also be required to register with the SEC before merging, and be subject to additional disclosure obligations. The rules will go into effect more than four months from now. 

ACCOUNTING TWEAKS

The agency is also adding new financial reporting and accounting requirements for SPAC deals. Companies looking to go public by merging with a blank-check firm will now be jointly liable legally for information shared with investors about the pending combination.

Those target companies also will have to provide financial statements audited by an independent accounting firm that follows US audit board rules, as is the case for traditional IPOs. The SEC will treat the merger as a sale to the blank-check company’s public shareholders, clarifying who controls the newly created entity for accounting purposes.

AI, health care and trade logistics will be themes to watch in 2024, says BlackRock strategist


Latest News

Foreign investor sues Florida EB-5 sponsor, alleges he was left empty-handed after $72M sale
Foreign investor sues Florida EB-5 sponsor, alleges he was left empty-handed after $72M sale

The building sold for $72 million - he says his $550,000 never came back.

Fintech bytes: FP Alpha asserts tax software leadership with updated AI snapshot tool
Fintech bytes: FP Alpha asserts tax software leadership with updated AI snapshot tool

Also, Zocks and Amplify unveil integrations with Conquest and Wealthbox CRM to extend their reach among independent advisors.

Pathstone absorbs $12B Philadelphia RIA Mill Creek Capital
Pathstone absorbs $12B Philadelphia RIA Mill Creek Capital

The deal creates one of the largest independent RIA footprints in the Philadelphia metro region, with more than $30 billion in combined client assets.

Advisor moves: Cetera scoops $490M Commonwealth team in Pennsylvania
Advisor moves: Cetera scoops $490M Commonwealth team in Pennsylvania

Elsewhere, Osaic and Ameriprise each recruited family-owned practices previously affiliated with LPL and Thrivent.

Divorce Is When Financial Planning May Matter Most and Advisors Are Still Late to the Table
Divorce Is When Financial Planning May Matter Most and Advisors Are Still Late to the Table

Divorce is a financial inflection point, not just a legal one and wealth managers need to be part of the process from day one

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.