The State of the SPAC Market

Executive summary:

  • The volume of SPAC IPOs and mergers has reverted to pre-hype levels. Funding from public and private investors has plunged, while redemptions by existing investors have increased sharply.
  • The outlook for SPACs is far more muted than in the past few years. We expect a return to a far smaller level of issuance, deal making and execution as the space bears more scrutiny from sponsors, investors and regulators alike.
  • We anticipate that there will be still some opportunities—albeit a fraction of recent volume—for seasoned, sophisticated investors to take advantage of in 2023, due to the smaller market size, a decrease in competition for deals, fewer sponsors and stronger companies coming to market.

Not with a bang but with a whimper. -T.S. Eliot, The Hollow Men

In the past three years, special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) experienced stratospheric growth, became a manic bubble as sponsors raised new IPOs with a relentless fervor along with a market happy to oblige. However investors experienced poor performance and sponsors have lost capital from a lack of successful mergers and inevitable SPAC redemptions and liquidations. The outlook for SPACs is far more muted than we have seen. We expect a return to a far smaller level of issuance, deal making and execution as the space bears more scrutiny from sponsors, investors and regulators alike.

How did we get here?

Market growth

For many years, SPACs were a little known, niche investment vehicle in capital markets. This began to change in 2017, when the number of SPAC IPOs and mergers started to grow as sponsors saw them as an attractive alternative to traditional IPOs to bring (primarily tech-focused) companies public. Momentum continued in the following years, driven by a number of high -profile mergers and greater investor interest, and SPACs were able to raise record proceeds.

SPAC IPOs: Growth and decline
SPAC mergers

Source: SPAC Research

SPACs soon became the private-to-public vehicle of choice. At their peak, SPACs accounted for the majority of new U.S. public listings, exceeding traditional IPOs.

SPAC vs. Traditional IPO launches