The Securities and Exchange Commission has a fresh warning for the booming SPAC market: Blank-check companies arent an end around to avoid disclosing key information to investors.
In a statement Thursday, a top SEC official made clear that despite their unique structure, special purpose acquisition companies are covered by federal securities rules. Claims that promoters face less legal liability than a traditional public offering are uncertain at best, said John Coates, the acting director of the agencys corporation finance division.
SPACs list on public stock exchanges to raise money for the purpose of buying other companies. For months, the SEC has been raising red flags that investors arent being fully informed of potential risks.
[More: Financial advisers are steering clients away from SPACs]
Coates emphasized that the firms have obligations as they seek to identify an acquisition target, and eventually take it public through another transaction known as a de-SPAC.
A de-SPAC transaction gives no one a free pass for material misstatements or omissions, he said. All involved in promoting, advising, processing, and investing in SPACs should understand the limits on any alleged liability difference between SPACs and conventional IPOs.
About 300 SPACs launched on U.S. exchanges in the first quarter, raising almost $100 billion. That total was more than SPACs raised all of last year.
The deluge has overwhelmed those responsible for reviewing filings at the SEC, triggered a surge in liability insurance rates for blank-check companies and fueled market anxieties that the bubble is about to burst.
The post SEC to Wall Street: SPACs arent a way around securities laws appeared first on InvestmentNews.
We're here to help. Send us an email or call us at +1 (585) 329-9661. Please feel free to contact our experts.
A donation will be made by Adviser First Partners to a Veterans organization on behalf of all financial professionals and firms that register each month
Contact Us© 2025 Adviser First Partners. All Rights Reserved.
Web Design by eLink Design, Inc., a Kentucky Web Design company