KEY POINTS
  • New SPAC deals this year recorded an average jump of 6.5% on their debuts, a nearly sixfold increase from their historical levels, according to University of Florida finance professor Jay Ritter.
  • The rally doesn't stop after the first day. The proprietary CNBC SPAC 50 index, which tracks the 50 largest U.S.-based pre-merger blank-check deals by market cap, is up nearly 14% so far this year.
  • There are signs that the SPAC boom is getting caught up in the retail trader-fueled market frenzy. Bank of America's client flows showed that retail investors represented 46% of trading volume in SPACs on its platform in January.
  • History shows a poor track record for SPACs if retail investors get in too late.

In this article

The red-hot SPAC market is getting even hotter in 2021, raising concerns about rampant speculation detached from reason that could leave retail investors fresh off the GameStop bust holding the bag.

Not only are special purpose acquisition companies raising a record level of capital — more than $30 billion so far for its biggest quarter ever — pre-merger SPACs are also seeing an outsized pop on the first day of trading.

In this article