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Chris Bryant, Columnist

SPACs Are Back. What Could Go Wrong This Time?

While market participants have learned some hard lessons, the trend toward speculative crypto deals isn’t reassuring.

Chamath Palihapitiya, one of the key cheerleaders during the SPAC boom-and-bust, is considering getting back into the market. 

Photographer: Mark Kauzlarich/Bloomberg

Following a surge in new listings by special purpose acquisition companies, one can’t help but worry about how astonishingly short Wall Street’s memory is. These cash shells experienced a spectacular boom and bust in 2020-2022 as unrealistic valuations and retail investor enthusiasm for firms with little or no revenue ended in bankruptcies, shareholder litigation and financially painful liquidations. Now, this maligned asset class is off to the races again.

US SPACs have raised $11 billion so far this year compared with less than $2 billion in the same period a year earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. They’ll try to find a firm to merge with, providing them with a shortcut to joining the public markets amid a still fairly tepid revival of traditional initial public offerings. SPACs have accounted for almost two-thirds of US IPO volume so far this year and more than 40% of proceeds, according to SPAC Analytics.