Los Angeles Times

ATI’s rocky start is prime example of SPACs’ pitfalls

- BLOOMBERG

It’s exactly what skeptics of the boom in special purpose acquisitio­n companies have been warning about.

ATI Physical Therapy Inc., in its earnings debut as a public company after a merger with a blank-check firm, revised its revenue projection­s sharply lower and disclosed larger-than-expected staff turnover. But the surprises went far beyond that.

“The release also lacked a share count, a balance sheet, a cash flow statement or, for that matter, a good defense for why the company’s original guidance (which was officially maintained up until yesterday) ever made sense,” Michael Petusky at Barrington Research wrote in a report. “We are shocked by what has unfolded at ATI.”

ATI’s shares closed Tuesday at $3.82, down 54% over two days and ranking it among the worst-performing companies to have gone public via a SPAC, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Before its earnings report, the Bolingbroo­k, Ill., rehabilita­tion services company had five buy ratings and zero calls to sell and an average price target of $13, Bloomberg data show.

By day’s end, at least five law firms from coast to coast had published news releases urging investors who had lost money to contact them for their securities fraud investigat­ions.

SPACs, which sell shares to raise money and hunt for takeovers, can offer private companies a path to markets without the rigorous scrutiny of a traditiona­l initial public offering. That has prompted a chorus of warnings from financial profession­als in recent months that the flood of new SPACs was creating conditions for deals with unsustaina­ble valuations and questionab­le disclosure­s. Although most mergers have so far held up, steep declines such as ATI’s underscore the risks and may force sponsors to do more thorough diligence.

Private equity firm Advent Internatio­nal owns about 62.9% of ATI, according to filings, and is now facing a paper loss of about $800 million.

It agreed in February to take ATI public through a merger with Fortress Value Acquisitio­n Corp. II, a SPAC sponsored by Fortress Credit, an arm of Fortress Investment Group.

Spokespeop­le for Advent and Fortress declined to comment.

Fortress itself is facing paper losses of about $54 million, including the $9 million in invested capital it injected to form the SPAC, according to people with knowledge of the matter. It was among participan­ts in the private investment in public equity that supported the transactio­n.

It has had success with other SPAC transactio­ns, including MP Materials Corp., a rare earths producer that closed Tuesday at $36.04, up 0.8%.

“Companies that go public via a SPAC tend not to have the stable, predictabl­e business models” that their counterpar­ts in a traditiona­l initial public offering do, said Greg Martin, a managing director at Rainmaker Securities, which facilitate­s secondary transactio­ns for private companies. “Investors may begin to have less faith in companies that go public via a SPAC, and the quality of the SPAC sponsor is going to become increasing­ly important.”

Most SPACs raise capital at $10 a share, a price that’s often used as a benchmark. Lordstown Motors Corp., the electric vehicle maker that tumbled after cutting full-year production expectatio­ns, closed Tuesday at $6.59. Hycroft Mining Holding Corp. has fallen to $2.27, Waitr Holdings Inc. has slipped to $1.59, and Ucommune Internatio­nal Ltd. ended Tuesday at $1.22.

ATI’s SPAC transactio­n gave the combined entity a market capitaliza­tion of $2.075 billion as of June 17, a figure that more than halved to $792 million as of Tuesday’s close. The company operates about 900 physical therapy clinics in 25 states.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? IN ITS EARNINGS debut as a public firm, ATI Physical Therapy revised revenue projection­s sharply lower and disclosed larger-than-expected staff turnover, along with other surprises. Now there’s talk of litigation.
Richard Drew Associated Press IN ITS EARNINGS debut as a public firm, ATI Physical Therapy revised revenue projection­s sharply lower and disclosed larger-than-expected staff turnover, along with other surprises. Now there’s talk of litigation.

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