Main Street chases blank-check deal frenzy
Josh Black was looking for the next lucrative deal after scoring a 500% profit in a few weeks by investing in electric truck maker Nikola Corp NKLA.O following the announcement of its merger with a blank-check acquisition company. He then invested $23,000 in Spartan Energy Acquisition Corp after the special purpose acquisition company, backed by buyout firm Apollo Global Management, clinched a $2.9 billion deal to merge with electric car maker Fisker. This time Black wasn't so lucky.
The mechanic from Cherry, Minnesota is down over 10% on his investment after Spartan's stock gave up much of its initial gains following the announcement of the Fisker deal last month. It's a different story for the big mutual funds, including BlackRock Inc (BLK.N), AllianceBernstein and Federated
Hermes Kaufmann, that were invited to finance the Fisker deal - and buy shares in Spartan before it was announced. Even after the decline in Spartan's stock, they're still up about 25%.
To be sure, retail investors who buy into SPACs before they clinch deals pay the same price as big Wall Street firms. But they have to do this without knowing what the acquisition target will be, taking a leap of faith on a SPAC's management team.
The biggest SPAC investors are treated differently. They are told beforehand what the acquisition target is under confidentiality agreements, in exchange for providing financing for the deal in the form of a private investment in public equity, or PIPE, transaction.
While preferential treatment of cornerstone investors is allowed under securities regulations, Wall Street's embrace of what used to be a backwater of the stock market underscores how it is now using its heft to tip the scales in its favor. Federated Hermes portfolio manager Stephen DeNichilo said retail investors buying shares in SPACs "need to take extra care and do extra due diligence".
He said his firm was given advance information on SPAC deals, such as Fisker, because it put in a substantial amount of money as an accredited investor. "We are taking a greater risk because we are investing earlier on. It takes three months for these transactions to close. A lot can happen in those three months," DeNichilo said. Spartan, Fisker, and AllianceBernstein did not respond to requests for comment. BlackRock declined to comment.
For retail investor Black, though, it was the announcement that well-known Wall Street firms were backing the Fisker deal to the tune of $500 million that embolden him to buy Spartan. "Big institutional investors buy huge amounts because they see a good opportunity. They are smart people behind those walls," he said. Black said he was now holding on to the stock, hoping it would go up by the time Spartan completes the merger.
As a record number of companies pursue mergers with SPACs as a way of going public that bypasses the traditional initial public offering (IPO), Wall Street has obliged. High-profile financiers such as Bill Ackman and Chamath Palihapitiya have raised billions of dollars for these shell firms through IPOs, with the aim of then combining with real companies in the next couple of years. Mom-and-pop investors have followed suit, helping fuel a frenzy for SPAC stocks in the wake of their deal announcements.
While some deals, such as those for Nikola, space tourism company Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc (SPCE.N) and fantasy sports and gambling company DraftKings Inc DKNG.O, have proved lucrative, others have left retail investors in the red. The average SPAC underperformed the S&P 500 and Russell 2000 indexes three, six and 12 months after their merger completion, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) analysts who analyzed 56 SPAC deals since January 2018. That's despite the average SPAC outperforming the indexes one month and three months following a deal announcement.
"There is some pump-and-dump trading going on with these SPACs," said Rosaria Pellegrino, a bed-and-breakfast owner in Naples, Italy, who is down 30% on her investment in SPACs that did deals with electric truck maker Hyliion and 3D mapping company Velodyne Lidar. Like Black, she's keeping the stocks for now in the hope of recouping her losses. As big Wall Street firms pile into SPACs, more and more PIPE deals are being struck with funds providing the bulk of the financing for specific targets.