KEY POINTS
  • SPACs are essentially "shell companies" with no actual commercial operations but are created solely for raising capital to acquire an existing private company so it can bypass the traditional IPO process.
  • Because SPACs have no previous operations or financial data to access, their track record depends on the reputation of the management teams.
  • According to Refinitiv, there were 165 global SPAC IPOs from January to October 2020, nearly double the number of global SPAC IPOs issued in 2019 and five times that of 2015.

In this article

SINGAPORE — The past year saw a record number of listings by special purpose acquisition companies — better known as SPACs, but these "shell companies" are hardly a modern phenomenon.

From January to October 2020, some 165 SPACs were listed, according to financial markets data provider Refinitiv. That's nearly double the number of global SPAC IPOs issued in the whole of 2019 and five times that of 2015.

In this article