De-SPAC
The process by which a SPAC completes its business combination with a target company, resulting in the target becoming a publicly traded entity — effectively a reverse merger facilitated by the SPAC's existing exchange listing.
A de-SPAC is the culmination of the SPAC lifecycle: the blank-check company merges with or acquires its target, the target's shareholders receive shares in the combined public entity, and the SPAC's ticker often changes to reflect the new operating company. The term "de-SPAC" emphasizes that the shell company sheds its blank-check status and becomes an operating business.
The de-SPAC process typically unfolds over 3–6 months once a definitive agreement is signed. Key steps include filing an S-4 or F-4 registration statement with the SEC (if new shares are being issued to target shareholders), obtaining shareholder approval via a proxy vote, satisfying any minimum cash conditions, and closing the transaction. The SEC reviews the registration statement and may issue comment letters requiring amendments.
Post-closing, the combined company must meet all ongoing SEC reporting obligations. Founder shares held by the sponsor convert to common stock (the "promote"), lockup periods begin, and any earnout tranches start their measurement windows.
De-SPAC transactions peaked in 2020–2021, with over 200 completions per year. The SEC's enhanced disclosure rules (adopted 2024) added requirements around projections, dilution disclosure, and target company financial statements, making the de-SPAC process more rigorous but also more transparent for investors.
Example SPACs
| Symbol | Name | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| FIAC | Focus Impact Acquisition Corp. | Target: DevvStream Corp. |
| DMYT | dMY Technology Group, Inc. | Target: Rush Street Interactive, LP |
| CIK0001831979 | Global Partner Acquisition Corp II | Target: Stardust Power Inc. |
| HRMN | HARMONY MERGER CORP. | Target: NextDecade Corp. |
| KINZ | KINS Technology Group Inc. | Target: CXApp Holdings Corp |
Data sourced from SEC EDGAR filings. Example SPACs are drawn from the SpacDesk universe and selected to illustrate this concept. Definitions reflect standard SPAC structures; individual deals may vary.