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Business

Trump SPAC deal in danger as merger deadline approaches

Former US President Donald Trump on Oct. 20 announced plans to launch his own social networking platform, dubbed “TRUTH Social,” which is expected to begin beta launch for “invited guests” next month.

Chris Delmas | AFP | Getty Images

The fate of the proposed merger between former President Donald Trump’s media company and the shell company that aims to take it public — and give it a cash injection — has grown murkier as a crucial deadline approaches.

The Digital World Acquisition Corp. is due to merge with Trump Media and Technology Group, owner of Truth Social, on Thursday. DWAC, a special purpose acquisition company, has spent the past week collecting enough shareholder votes to extend the deadline for the transaction. The companies have not completed the merger, and federal investigations related to the deal and Trump have mounted.

The result of the shareholder vote will be announced Thursday at 12:00 p.m. ET.

DWAC was scheduled to publicly announce the result in a special meeting Tuesday, but CEO Patrick Orlando adjourned the meeting within two minutes to allow additional voting time. Earlier in the day, Reuters reported that the vote had failed, citing sources familiar with the matter.

DWAC has previously warned that failure to approve the extension could result in its liquidation, which would pay out roughly at its original share price of $10 per share. DWAC was trading around $22 on Wednesday; the stock was around $97 in March.

Trump Media and Technology Group is also facing obstacles. His Truth Social app, created by the former president after he was banned from Twitter following the January 6, 2021 uprising, has been banned from the Google Play Store.

The company signaled that they are still working on the deal.

“TMTG will continue to work with all stakeholders in connection with its proposed merger and hopes SEC officials will complete their review in a timely manner and free from political interference,” the company told CNBC on Tuesday.

But Trump indicated in a Truth Social post on Saturday that the issue will be resolved and that he doesn’t need DWAC or the cash injection from the deal to keep the platform going.

“Google is making good progress (I think?). SEC seeks to harm companies providing financing (SPAC),” the former president wrote to his 4 million Truth Social followers on Saturday. “Who knows? Anyway, I don’t need funding, ‘I’m really rich!’ Anyone private company???”

The failure of the DWAC merger could sear retail investors attempting SPAC investing because of the President.

Orlando may be able to delay DWAC’s liquidation, according to an SEC filing Wednesday. Orlando’s corporation and SPAC sponsor, ARC Global Investments II, plans to contribute $2.8 million of its own funds to initiate a three-month extension.

However, DWAC may not be out of the woods. The company faces federal investigations into possible securities violations by DWAC and Trump Media and Technology Group. Trump also faces multiple investigations related to the removal of sensitive documents from the White House and his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol riots.

DWAC has also warned in an SEC filing that Trump’s waning popularity could pose a risk to the deal.

Representatives from DWAC and Trump Media did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday.

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Politics

SPAC pulled, bail listening to in UAE case modified

Thomas Barrack, Executive Chairman and CEO, Colony Capital, participates in a panel discussion during the annual Milken Institute Global Conference at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on April 28, 2019 in Beverly Hills, California.

Michael Kovac | Getty Images

A federal judge in Los Angeles on Friday ordered the release on a $250 million secured bond of Thomas Barrack, the private equity investor charged with illegally lobbying his close friend ex-President Donald Trump for the United Arab Emirates.

The order requires the release bond — which is among the highest ever set in the world — to be secured by $5 million cash, another $21.23 million in securities and Barrack’s home in California.

Barrack and his co-defendant Matthew Grimes, a 27-year-old business associate, had been in jail since Tuesday, when they were arrested in Los Angeles on an indictment issued in Brooklyn, New York, federal court.

Grimes earlier Friday was ordered released on a $5 million bond. Neither he nor Barrack were in court before Judge Patricia Donohue, having waived their right to appear.

Donohue ordered Barrack to surrender his passport, to be fitted with an electronic bracelet, and be subject to GPS monitoring and a curfew.

Barrack also was ordered to stay in the company of his lawyers until at least his and Grimes’ arraignment Monday in Brooklyn.

He also cannot transfer any funds overseas, is barred from transferring more than $50,000 except for attorneys fees, and is prohibited from trading securities without written permission from prosecutors. His travel is restricted to the federal Central District of California, and to the Southern and Eastern districts of New York, which encompass New York City, Long Island, and several counties to the north of the Big Apple.

Barrack was identified as a billionaire on the Forbes richest list in 2013, but since then has not appeared on that roster.

Earlier Friday, Falcon Acquisition, a special purpose acquisition company backed by Barrack, told the Securities and Exchange Commission it is withdrawing its registration statement with the agency “because the company has elected to abandon” planned transactions.

The transactions had included an initial public offering of 25 million shares to raise $250 million for Falcon Acquisition, which was formed by Barrack’s family office Falcon Peak, and TI Capital.

Falcon Acquisition, which had planned to list its shares on the New York Stock Exchange, had said it was targeting tech-driven businesses as candidates for mergers.

A lawyer for Falcon Peak did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment. 

Barrack and Grimes originally were due to have their bail hearing in Los Angeles on Monday.

But that was moved up to Friday after prosecutors reached a deal on bail conditions with defense lawyers.

Prosecutors earlier in the week had asked at Barrack’s first court appearance in LA on Tuesday that he be detained until at least he appears in court in Brooklyn for another hearing because of the risk that he could flee to avoid facing the charges. Barrack holds Lebanese citizenship and has a private jet.

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Barrack, who was chairman of Trump’s 2017 inauguration fund, is accused with Grimes and UAE national Rashid Sultan Rashid Al Malik Alshahhi of secretly advancing Emirates’ interests at the direction of senior officials of the oil-rich Gulf country. Prosecutors said the three influenced the foreign policy positions of Trump’s 2016 campaign, and continued that effort during Trump’s presidency through April 2018.

Barrack also is charged with obstruction of justice and making multiple false statements during a June 2019 interview with federal law enforcement agents.

The indictment noted that Barrack at the same time informally advised American officials on Middle East policy, and sought appointment to a senior role in the U.S. government, including as special envoy to the Middle East.

Alshahhi, 43, remains at large.

Barrack stepped down last year as CEO of Colony Capital, a private equity firm he founded, and as its executive chairman in April.

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Health

Hong Kong biotech start-up Prenetics plans $1.three billion SPAC merger

Signage for Prenetics, a Hong Kong-based biotechnology company, at the company’s laboratory in Hong Kong, China, on Jan. 26, 2018.

Anthony Kwan| Bloomberg | Getty Images

Hong Kong biotech company Prenetics is set to merge with Artisan Acquisition, a special purpose acquisition company, in a deal that will value the new entity at $1.3 billion or more, according to a source close to the deal.

The transaction is expected to close by the end of this year. The SPAC is already traded on the Nasdaq under the ticker ARTU.

SPACs are shell companies set up to raise money through an initial public offering — their sole purpose is to merge with or acquire an existing private company and to take it public. They bypass Wall Street’s traditional IPO process.

Artisan Acquisition is backed by Adrian Cheng, the CEO and Executive Vice Chairman of Hong Kong-listed New World Development, a conglomerate with $88 billion in assets.

Prenetics is a diagnostic and genetic testing company with significant operations in Hong Kong and the U.K. It was founded by serial entrepreneur Danny Yeung and will become the first billion-dollar start-up in Hong Kong to go public.

A technician handles a sample at a Prenetics laboratory in Hong Kong, China, on Jan. 26, 2018.

Anthony Kwan | Bloomberg | Getty Images

UBS, Citi, Credit Suisse and CICC are financial advisors on the potential de-SPAC transaction.

Artisan raised $339 million in the SPAC, and has signed a further $60 million forward purchase agreements with investment firm Aspex and PAG, a private asset manager for institutional investors, according to the source who requested anonymity as that person was not allowed to discuss the information publicly.

Talks with additional pipe investors are said to be ongoing, with strong initial demand, the source said.

The company has grown significantly since its founding in 2014, and 2021 revenue is projected to surpass $200 million. That would mark 400% growth over the year prior, according to the source.

Annual revenue is expected to reach $600 million by 2025, said the source.

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Health

Gene testing agency 23andMe trades increased after Branson SPAC merger

Anne Wojcicki, co-founder and CEO of 23andMe (right) celebrates with 23andMe employees after remotely ringing the NASDAQ opening bell at the headquarters of DNA technology company 23andMe in Sunnyvale, California, USA on June 17, 2021.

Peter DaSilva | Reuters

The newest trade on the exchange is “ME”.

23andMe, a personalized medicine and home genetic test kit company, went public on Thursday through a merger with a Richard Branson SPAC, VG Acquisition Corp..

23andMe stock rose 21% on the Nasdaq on its first day of trading as a publicly traded company.

Founded by Anne Wojcicki – the former wife of Google founder Sergey Brin who was an early investor in the company – 23andMe was founded 15 years ago. Together with Ancestry, it helped advance the idea that genetic testing is not just a medical field, but a big consumer business. His home test kits, which enabled people to find out their genetic profiles and ancestry by sending some saliva in the mail, ushered in a new era of personalized medicine, albeit not without controversy.

23andMe, a five-time CNBC Disruptor 50 company, had no straight or sure path to success as a publicly traded company.

It was reviewed by the FDA earlier in its history; Questions about consumer privacy continue to arise as genetic information is collected from millions of people; has run into financial difficulties in recent years when the market for personalized genetic testing seemed saturated; Skepticism about the basis of their gene-based risk analysis remains controversial; and as it delves deeper into drug development, a gap in its current customer base and underlying genetic data between a mostly European genetic profile and an underrepresentation of many minorities and ethnic groups.

“It will take time … to really make sure we get all communities to participate in the research,” Wojcicki said Thursday morning in an interview with CNBC’s TechCheck. “You can’t make discoveries in a population if those people aren’t part of it. We need the right customers and we have to present the product to them in the right way.”

Wojcicki says the company has big things ahead of it for both its consumer and drug discovery and development platforms. Approximately 80% of 23andMe’s 11 million members now choose to share their genetic information (anonymized) for drug development research.

“Our genetics represent all of life on this planet and we have the opportunity to understand what it means and, in doing so, it will improve your own life, but it will also contribute to all kinds of research discoveries,” said Wojcicki.

She says the controversy over the medical usefulness of the information won’t go away once it is put into the hands of consumers, and it ranges from critical, clinical information such as mutations in the gene that causes breast cancer, BRCA, to “more controversial” genetic ones Information on variants of Alzheimer’s disease. Some people at higher risk of blood clots choose to walk around more during flights based on their 23andMe reports.

However, she added that consumers have shown that they want this information to help them make decisions.

In the case of Alzheimer’s risk, she said, “This information … really affects how they live their lives … how they retire … plan to get older.”

Her own 10-year-old son used the company’s lactose intolerance analysis to diagnose his abdominal pain, and Wojcicki herself said, although she was reluctant to talk about her personal use of the product, as the daughter of a woman who suffered from breast cancer and who a higher risk of illness, the information influences their decision to drink that “leisure glass of wine”.

“Over the past 15 years we’ve built the infrastructure so we can take off to prove to consumers that we can get the information and understand it without a healthcare professional,” she said.

In her opinion, the key to the future is that consumers want to use the information not only to change their lives, but also to contribute to drug discovery.

23andMe has 40 programs ongoing on its drug discovery platform.

“We want them to have a truly personalized health experience and … benefit the human genome when all of this aggregated data is turned into therapeutic programs,” said Wojcicki. “When I think about the future of therapeutics, the next five years are really about moving these programs forward and getting them into the clinic.”

The company also recently launched a subscription product to bring more content and services to consumers who want to take extra steps after their genetic reports.

“We reach thousands of people who call the customer care team each week and want to know how this information can be used and applied to lead healthier longer lives,” she said.

The IPO market already set an annual record for the transaction volume of $ 171 billion in 2021, and only halfway through the year. Average first day trading profits on trades this year were over 40%. Although both the traditional IPO market and SPAC yields have cooled in recent months, the Renaissance IPO ETF and CNBC SPAC Index have been negative since the start of 2021, with a continuation of last year’s big gains since the start of the year. Meanwhile, concerns about SPAC deals have increased, and some high profile SPACs like Branson’s Virgin Galactic and electric vehicle maker Lordstown Motors have shown high levels of volatility.

Nonetheless, Branson and other investors plan to bring another space company, the satellite internet service Virgin Orbit, to the public via a SPAC in the coming weeks.

This history has been updated for the company’s closing price on the first day of trading on Thursday.

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World News

Virgin Orbit in talks with SPAC for $three billion deal to go public

Richard Branson’s Virgin Orbit takes off on a rocket under the wings of a modified Boeing 747 jetliner for a major drop test of its high-altitude launch system for satellites from Mojave, Calif., July 10, 2019.

Mike Blake | Reuters

Virgin Orbit, the satellite launch spin-off from Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic, is in advanced discussions to go public via a SPAC led by a former Goldman Sachs partner valued at approximately $ 3 billion , confirmed CNBC on Saturday.

The company is in talks about a deal with NextGen Acquisition II, a person familiar with the discussions told CNBC. NextGen II is a special-purpose acquisition company co-led by George Mattson, who previously led Goldman’s global industrial group, and former PerkinElmer Chairman and CEO Gregory Sum.

Sky News first covered the talks on Saturday and said a deal will be announced in the coming weeks. Virgin Orbit declined CNBC’s request for comment.

The company is a spin-off from Branson’s space tourism company Virgin Galactic. Virgin Orbit is privately owned by Branson’s multinational conglomerate Virgin Group, with a minority stake in Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala.

The company’s first demonstration launch in May 2020.

Greg Robinson | Jungfrau Railway Or

Virgin Orbit uses a modified Boeing 747 aircraft to launch its missiles, a method known as air launch. Rather than launching missiles from the ground like competitors like Rocket Lab or Astra do, the company’s planes carry its LauncherOne missiles up to an altitude of around 45,000 feet and drop them just before they fire the engine and accelerate into space – a method that the company is promoting more flexibly than a ground-based system.

LauncherOne is designed to carry small satellites weighing up to 500 kilograms, or around 1,100 pounds, into space. Virgin Orbit completed its first successful launch in January and plans to have its second later this month.

Next Gen II raised $ 350 million when it completed its IPO in March and an additional $ 33 million greenshoe deal in April for a total of $ 383 million. The funds would primarily be used to help Virgin Orbit scale its business. Virgin Orbit CEO Dan Hart told CNBC in October that the company plans to raise approximately $ 150 million in fresh capital.

Branson brought Virgin Galactic to the public in 2019 through a SPAC deal with billionaire investor Chamath Palihapitiya.

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Business

On-line funds firm Paysafe makes SPAC debut Tuesday

London-based online payment company Paysafe will begin trading in the US public markets with CNBC on Monday following its merger with blank check company Foley Trasimene Acquisition II Corp, billionaire and sports manager Bill Foley.

Foley, who founded the Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC), announced in December that it would target Paysafe in a deal valued at approximately $ 9 billion, including debt.

“Paysafe … is ubiquitous. It’s just everywhere in terms of the gaming world and digital wallets, e-cash solutions,” he said in a “Mad Money” interview. “We’ll go public tomorrow when we trade on the New York Stock Exchange.”

Foley is the chairman of Fidelity National Financial and the majority owner of the Vegas Golden Knights.

Paysafe, which includes brands like Income Access, Paysafecard, Skrill and Neteller, is backed by Blackstone and CVC. Companies use Paysafe products to digitally process credit card, cash and direct debit transactions. Prepaid cards and digital wallets are other offers.

Foley, whose SPAC raised $ 1.47 billion in August, said the company plans to penetrate the domestic gaming market, including brick and mortar stores, and help casinos go cashless. Paysafe’s business is mostly done internationally, he said.

The North American gaming market also offers an opportunity as the company hopes to become the “preeminent I-gaming leader” on the continent.

“I love Paysafe. It’s a really great company,” said Foley. “We’re pretty far along with a couple of different ideas that we were working on at the same time that Paysafe was released.”

The shares of Foley Trasimene Acquisition Corp. II rose 5.77% to $ 15.39 on Monday, a valuation of around $ 2.8 billion at close of trading.

Categories
Business

Satellite tv for pc imagery specialist BlackSky newest house SPAC going public

An artist rendering of the company’s global satellites in orbit.

Black sky

Seattle-based satellite imagery specialist BlackSky is the newest space company to be publicly traded soon. The company announced a SPAC deal on Thursday.

BlackSky merges with the special purpose vehicle company Osprey Technology. BlackSky will be listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker BKSY when the deal closes, which is expected in July.

“This transaction fully funds our growth plans and accelerates our vision of delivering a ‘first-to-know’ advantage to our customers. This is a major turning point for our industry as commercial and government users need access to real-time information on the changes that is most important to them, ”said Brian O’Toole, CEO of BlackSky, in a statement.

Ospreys SPAC is currently trading under the ticker SFTW. Osprey is led by investors Edward Cohen and Jonathan Cohen together with David DiDomenico from JANA Partners. Shares rose up to 37% on the Thursday before trading.

BlackSky expects to generate around $ 450 million in cash income from the deal, including $ 180 million in a PIPE round with investors like Tiger Global, Mithril Capital (Ajay Royan and Peter Thiel’s investment firm) and Hedosophia ( British investor Ian) Osborne) and Senator Investment Group.

The merger is expected to be worth $ 1.5 billion, based on the value of the PIPE, according to the press release.

The company plans to use the funds to further achieve its goal of having a network of 30 imaging satellites taking pictures every 30 minutes from anywhere on the planet. To date, BlackSky has five satellites in operation, and plans to launch nine more satellites into orbit later this year. The company’s vertically integrated LeoStella joint venture with the Franco-Italian manufacturer Thales Alenia Space is building the BlackSky satellites.

A pair of BlackSky Global satellites in the LeoStella manufacturing facility.

Black sky

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Business

Deal Making in 2020 Was All Concerning the SPAC

“I think the SPAC business has become a large and sustainable ecosystem,” said Michael Klein, the veteran banker who has since launched a number of SPACs that have made multi-billion dollar acquisitions, including the healthcare provider MultiPlan and the analytics software company Clarivate.

Some financiers have since made it their business to increase SPAC after SPAC. Mr. Klein recently raised $ 450 million for his fifth Churchill Capital fund. Venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya, who brought Virgin Galactic to the public, has raised a number of funds in search of acquisition targets.

And deal makers expect the SPAC craze, so far largely an American phenomenon, to go global. Earlier this month, French billionaire Xavier Niel raised € 300 million ($ 368 million) for a blank check fund, making it the biggest market debut in France this year.

What could go wrong?

Popular targets of SPAC deals this year have been electric vehicle manufacturers, some of which have stumbled heavily since going public. Goldman Sachs strategists noted earlier this week that many post-merger SPACs had poor returns compared to the S&P 500 this year. “If poor returns persist, investors’ appetite for new SPACs may wane,” they write, suggesting that new funds may become more difficult to attract. The short seller Carson Block has declared SPACs the “big money heist 2020”.

The popularity of SPACs could also reverse itself, advisers warned. Goldman strategists estimate that there are currently 193 blank check funds looking for acquisition targets of $ 63 billion. This implies a potential purchasing power of around 300 billion US dollars, as the typical SPAC, according to LUMA Partners, merges with a company five times its size thanks to external investors participating in the transaction.

SPACs typically have two years to find an acquisition target, or they are contractually required to return their money to investors. This puts them on the clock, potentially pushing each other out of business, or leading to mergers that arise out of urgency rather than cleverness. “A business model that encourages promoters to do something – anything – with other people’s money at times inevitably leads to significant destruction,” Block wrote.

And one of the big drivers of its surge in popularity earlier this year, its disappointing IPO performance, may be fading. The huge surge in Airbnb and DoorDash ratings on their recent IPOs could move some companies back to more traditional IPOs, leaving SPACs with billions of dollars but fewer targets worth buying.