Business | Tragedy, then farce

A Wall Street wheeze makes a surprising comeback

SPACs are back in favour

Chamath Palihapitiya, the founder of Social Capital, at a conference in New York
Photograph: Hiroko Masuike/New York Times / Redux / Eyevine
|3 min read

THE SPecial-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) was Wall Street’s favourite get-richer-quicker scheme during the pandemic. First, some big-shot investor raises capital by listing a shell company on the stockmarket. The big shot then calls around other big shots, looking for a moonshot. When a captivating private company is found, it merges with the shell, whose investors choose either to redeem their shares or own part of the resulting business. SPACs can be a wheeze for the sponsors who set them up (in return for a cut) and the investment bankers who advise them, but have tended to be less good for investors who pay these costs.

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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Tragedy, then farce”

From the July 5th 2025 edition

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