Thematic Times: SPACs Within the Thematic Space | ETF Trends

What exactly is a SPAC?

SPACs are fundamentally neither good nor bad—a SPAC merger is actually just a method of taking a company public, much like an IPO with several key differences. A SPAC (or special purpose acquisition company) is a type of blank check company with no operations and limited assets created solely to combine with a private company. After the private company merges with the SPAC, it becomes a public company, and the newly formed company retains the operations of the target company and trades under a new ticker.(2) This differs from the traditional IPO route, where a private company issues new shares and sells them on a public exchange.(3) SPAC mergers have several advantages compared to IPOs. They are usually faster than an IPO and cheaper to market (no roadshows are required to generate public investment).(4) In addition, initial prices are negotiated ahead of the transaction (usually $10 per share) instead of being based on market conditions, which can be more advantageous during volatile markets. SPACs are popular within certain sectors (e.g., disruptive technology, industrial manufacturing) because they are often smaller, less mature firms that may have more difficulty raising money through a traditional IPO process because of their largely innovative, growth-oriented ideas.

What has changed for SPACs?

While higher interest rates and rotation away from growth investments may keep SPAC interest lower than recent years, stricter regulations are likely the largest obstacle in the future. The SEC has started to address “safe harbor” laws that have been protecting SPACs from investor lawsuits. Because SPAC mergers are technically acquisitions, SPACs can include future projections, while many of these companies have no historical data.(5) These projections can often be more optimistic than reality, especially when markets are volatile as they have been the past few years. For example, there were several electric vehicle companies that went public through SPACs in 2020-2021. Many had several years of ambitious production goals scheduled, which were slowly pushed out due to COVID, supply chain, and operational issues (for some). In contrast, companies going through an IPO process typically have to present several years of historical data and cannot make forward-looking statements.

How does this apply to thematic investing?

While SPACs have been prevalent within disruptive technology sectors like electric vehicle, space, and biotechnology companies, SPAC popularity and thematic investing aren’t necessarily correlated. While the number of SPAC mergers is diminishing, SPACs have been around for many years and will likely continue to exist as a valid method of taking a company public. Compared to 2020, however, the quality of SPACs could likely improve significantly as sponsors gain more experience identifying targets, investors grow more aware of what SPACs are, and regulations are put in place to protect investors from extremely bullish forecasts. Additionally, thematic investing doesn’t just apply to newer stocks. While the S-Network Space Index (SPACE) includes newer SPAC companies like Virgin Galactic Holdings (SPCE, 4.0% index weight), Rocket Lab USA (RKLB, 4.0% index weight), Astra Space (ASTR, 0.3% index weight), Virgin Orbit Holdings (VORB, 0.2% index weight), and Momentus (MNTS, 0.3% index weight), top constituents are longstanding commercial satellite and telecom companies like Iridium Communications (IRDM, 5.7% index weight), ViaSat (VSAT, 5.6% index weight), Globalstar (GSAT, 5.5% index weight), and Sirius XM Holdings (SIRI, 5.2% index weight).(6) Similarly, the S-Network Electric & Future Vehicle Index (FUTURE) is largely driven by well-established semiconductor/technology companies and legacy automakers like Apple (AAPL, 5.0% index weight), Tesla (TSLA, 4.7% index weight), Toyota (7203 JP, 2.8% index weight), and Ford (F, 1.0% index weight). Newer entrants have limited contributions to industry revenue and are weighed significantly smaller within the index. Companies that have gone through a SPAC merger include Proterra (PTRA, 0.6% index weight) and Lucid Group (LCID, 0.4% index weight). But even among newer entrants, some companies like Rivian Automotive (RIVN, 0.6% index weight) have opted for a traditional IPO rather than a SPAC merger.

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Related Research:

Is the FUTURE Electric, Autonomous, or Both?
Legacy Automakers Charge Ahead of New Entrants in EV Push
Four Megatrends Elevating the Commercial Space Industry
Investing in Space: Satellites Show the Big Picture

(1) SPACs: What You Need to Know (hbr.org)
(2) Blank Check Company | Investor.gov
(3) What You Need to Know About SPACs – Updated Investor Bulletin | Investor.gov
(4) Why so many companies are choosing SPACs over IPOs (kpmg.us)
(5) SEC.gov | SPACs, IPOs, and Liability Risk under the Securities Laws
(6) All index weights as of 10/11/2022

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