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Is the SPAC boom over? Asia, US deals appear to be fizzling out

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Some firms are now finding Hong Kong, left, less appealing for their Asia headquarters than Singapore, right.

George Rose | Getty Images, Reuters

It’s been a slow and cautious start for SPACs that launched in Hong Kong and Singapore in recent months — in stark contrast to last year’s SPAC boom in the U.S. which has also fizzled out.

SPACs are special purpose acquisition companies. They are shell companies that raise capital in an initial public offering and use the cash to merge with a private company in order to take it public, usually within two years.

Only one SPAC was launched in Hong Kong in the first quarter and it raised $128 million, while three were launched in Singapore, raising a total of $334 million, according to data analytics firm Refinitiv.

“This is likely reflective of investors being happy to play a game of patience, rather than retail investors in the US who in recent years chased SPACs higher in [the] hope they would acquire a ‘hot start up,'” said Neil Campling, head of technology, media and telecom research at Mirabaud Equity Research.

Among the three SPACs listed in Singapore was Vertex Technology Acquisition and Pegasus, both of which last traded below their offer price of 5 Singapore dollars ($3.60).

In Hong Kong, Aquila Acquisition made its SPAC debut in March, which was also trading below its offer price of 10 Hong Kong dollars ($1.27). Hong Kong still has another 10 SPAC applications as of mid-March, according to its stock exchange.

SPACs listed in Hong Kong and Singapore

SPAC Exchange Proceeds raised
Vertex Technology Acquisition CorpSingapore$125.87 million
Pegasus AsiaSingapore$109.83 million
Novo Tellus Alpha Acquisition CorpSingapore$44.63 million
Aquila Acquisition CorpHong Kong$127.82 million

The slow activity at the start would be an initial disappointment for Singapore, which had set its sights on drawing SPACs in hopes of reviving its flagging IPO market.

Hong Kong, on the other hand, has taken steps to dampen speculative trading by banning retail participation in SPAC trading before the stage where the merger takes place.

“I would describe the SPAC environment in Asia as cautious given the volatility in the US over the last two years and a general practice of ‘slow and steady wins the race’ mentality,” said Campling.

In my experience, if you are able to offer a Chinese CEO a straightforward, fast path to raising capital, there will be no shortage of takers.

Drew Bernstein

chairman, MBP

The U.S., in comparison, enjoyed a record year with more than $160 billion raised on U.S. exchanges in 2021 — that’s nearly double the amount raise the previous year, according to data from SPAC Research. 

But even the red-hot SPAC market in the U.S. seemed to struggle for direction this year.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has started to crack down on SPACs, with a host of new rules addressing complaints about incomplete information and insufficient protection against conflicts of interest and fraud. 

The CNBC SPAC Post Deal Index — which comprises SPACs that have completed their mergers and taken their target companies public — tumbled around 20% in January this year, from a February 2021 high. However, it has since bounced back partially.

Tailwinds for Hong Kong and Singapore

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

As for Singapore, it may “catch a tailwind” from the “enormous increase” in private equity investment into Southeast Asia recently, Bernstein said.

“We expect a boom of emerging growth companies riding favorable demographics and digital adoption in the region. For some of them, a merger with a Singapore SPAC could be a great way to access growth capital close to hope in a market with strong legal protections,” he said.

Hong Kong or Singapore?

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