SPAC To Merge With SPAC That Merged With Spinoff From Company The First SPAC Is Merging With
This may be the first SPAC to essentially merge with itself, but it will most assuredly not be the last.
Atelier Sossa Dede/ phot. Ji-Elle, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
As we, the SEC and everyone else has noted, there are a lot of SPACs out there these days, and a lot more in the pipeline. Many more, in fact, than have yet found targets willing to consummate a merger, much to the chagrin of Bill Ackman and Meg Whitman. And, annoyingly, asset managers have been taking themselves off the table by merging with each other rather than with a SPAC, which is obviously how it is supposed to work nowadays.
Securing a deal, therefore, requires a bit of creativity, and have Dyal Capital Partners, Owl Rock Capital Partners and HPS Investment Partners ever done so with this extraordinary circle-jerk: In essence, an asset manager that invests in hedge-fund stakes (Dyal) is simultaneously spinning off from its owner (Neuberger Berman) by merging with a SPAC backed by a hedge fund (HPS) that is partially owned by said asset manager, and merging with a second hedge fund (Owl Rock) that is also owns a chunk of, in which Frankestein’s monster the former parent will remain a major investor. Makes total sense, right?
Dyal and Owl Rock said they have been discussing a deal with a special-purpose acquisition company called Altimar Acquisition Corp.
The Wall Street Journal earlier reported on the transaction, which would value the combined asset managers at about $13 billion, according to people familiar with the matter….
Dyal has previously floated the idea of an IPO of one or more of its funds as a possible way to allow its investors the option of monetizing their holdings, the Journal has reported. The transaction being discussed, however, is an IPO of the management company and wouldn’t alter the liquidity opportunities for fund investors.
Of course: Who would want to undertake a complicated financial transaction to benefit them? And who says SPACs are just back-slapping masturbatory nonsense that will end in tears?
Dyal Capital in Talks to Combine With Owl Rock Capital [WSJ]
Ex-Barclays investment bank chairman plans to raise $250 million with blank-check company [MarketWatch]
Australia’s Macquarie to buy Waddell & Reed Financial for $1.7 billion [Reuters via CNBC]
This may be the first SPAC to essentially merge with itself, but it will most assuredly not be the last.
The SPAC-and-IPO party on Wall Street will have to stand in for the traditional holiday festivities this year.
Like another company going public via SPAC giving you access to the IPOs it’s choosing to shun.
Maybe because the SPAC cops are the only regulators left on a beat.
The SPAC deal pipeline, of course. Whatever did you think we meant?
And, this being a Quibi show, it’d be great if the courtship could be short and sweet and not subject to too much inspection.
The blank-check bubble looms over Asia.
Needless to say, the SEC is concerned.