Tag: SPAC regulation
SEC adopts new rules on SPACs—just investor protection or will it spell the demise of SPACs?
Recently, SPACs seem to have lost much of their allure, but why? Certainly there are multiple reasons related to the capital markets, but one reason may have been the anxiety of many SPAC proponents precipitated by the proposal that the SEC advanced in 2022 to regulate SPAC and de-SPAC disclosure and liability. Commissioner Hester Peirce, who had dissented on even issuing the proposal, remarked at the time that the proposal “seem[ed] designed to stop SPACs in their tracks.” Yesterday, the SEC voted, three to two, to adopt those rules, with some changes. The new rules and amendments will affect SPACs, shell companies and the use of projections in SEC filings. The SEC is also issuing new guidance addressing potential underwriters in de-SPAC transactions, as well as the status of SPACs under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (in lieu of adopting a proposed rule). According to Gensler, “Today’s adoption will help ensure that the rules for SPACs are substantially aligned with those of traditional IPOs, enhancing investor protection through three areas: disclosure, use of projections, and issuer obligations. Taken together, these steps will help protect investors by addressing information asymmetries, misleading information, and conflicts of interest in SPAC and de-SPAC transactions.” Peirce and Commissioner Mark Uyeda dissented, in essence, viewing the new rules as “merit regulation” and overkill, with the emphasis on “kill”—that is, as Peirce commented, the “regulatory reaper came for SPACs and seems to have won.” Similarly, Uyeda remarked that, with the current SPAC market just “a shell of its former self,” the new rules show that the SEC “intends to never let them return.” The final rules will become effective 125 days after publication in the Federal Register, except that compliance with the requirement to use inline XBRL will not be mandatory until 490 days after publication in Federal Register.
New SEC proposal takes on SPACs
Yesterday, the SEC voted, three to one, to propose new rules and amendments regarding SPACs, shell companies, the use of projections in SEC filings and a rule addressing the status of SPACs under the Investment Company Act of 1940. The proposal arrives in the context of calls from various corners, including from SEC Chair Gary Gensler and former Acting Corp Fin Director John Coates, to treat SPACs as an alternative method of conducting an IPO under the SEC’s policy framework. (See this PubCo post, this PubCo post and this PubCo post.) And let’s not forget the extensive recommendations from the SEC’s Investor Advisory Committee addressing SPAC regulatory and investor protection issues that have been under scrutiny. (See this PubCo post.) These investor protection concerns were exacerbated as a result of the proliferation of SPACs in 2020 and 2021—raising $83 billion in 2020 and $160 billion in 2021 and, in those same two years, constituting more than half of all IPOs, according to the proposing release. (Note, however, that this volume has not been sustained this year; according to Bloomberg, only $8.9 billion has been raised in 2022, “a fraction of the 279 deals raking in $93 billion during the same period last year.”) These concerns made SPACs an alluring target for SEC rulemaking, and the SEC has approached it with another enormous effort—literally—issuing a proposal of almost 400 pages. It must be a record—a second proposal in just over a week that would add an entirely new subpart to Reg S-K!
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