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Here’s The Hottest SPAC in the Markets Today–I call it Tesla 2.0

Here’s The Hottest SPAC in the Markets Today–I call it Tesla 2.0

The Hottest SPAC Now is Tesla 2.0
VectoIQ Acquisition Corp (VTIQ – NASDAQ)

 
A small corner of the initial public offering (IPO) market is actually booming right now–and the biggest renewable energy company since Tesla (TSLA-NASD) is now involved. They’re called Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs).
 
Now we’re seeing SPACs in renewable energy. Take Nikola Motors (NKLA-NASD), which used to be a SPAC called VectoIQ Acquisition Corp (VTIQ – NASDAQ). The stock price of this SPAC rose by more than triple since the beginning of March.
Investors piled into VectoIQ after they announced that they would merge with Nikola (as in Nikola Tesla), a private Arizona start-up developing a fleet of electric/hydrogen fuel cell vehicles – semi-trucks, pickups and power sport vehicles. 
 

SPAC’s: A Different Kind of IPO

 
VectoIQ’s bid for Nikola is typical for a SPAC. 
 
A SPAC is a large pool of money—often $100 million or more–looking to merge with a private company and bring it public.
 
Think of a SPAC as kind of a backdoor entry to the public markets. 
 
Unlike a traditional initial public offering (IPO) a SPAC merger doesn’t require a roadshow. There is no broker/dealer underwriter. The SEC documents are not as extensive.
 
For private companies not looking to raise new capital (or for those looking to cash out), it can be a preferable route to the public market.
 
SPAC IPOs are gaining momentum. The number and dollar value of IPO’s have been rising for 10 years. So far 2020 looks like another record breaker.
Source: Euromoney
 

The SPAC Structure

 
VectoIQ, like all SPACs, went public at a price of $10 per unit (in May 2018). 23 million units were issued for $230 million. 
 
Also typical was the SPAC structure of shares and warrants. For VectoIQ, each unit consisted of one share and one warrant. The warrants gave investors the ability to purchase a share at $11.50. 
 
Each SPAC comes out with a share and warrant IPO and most price the warrants at $11.50. The variable is usually warrant fraction. Sometimes investors get a full warrant, sometimes they get half, sometimes less. It all depends on demand for that SPAC.
 
After the IPO, the shares of VectoIQ did nothing for almost two years. The company was just a shell, holding cash in short term treasuries.
 
But behind the scenes the managers of the SPAC were looking for a deal. When they found the right one (Nikola), they made it happen.
 

The Rules of SPACs

 
SPACs are also called blind capital pools or “private investment public equity” (PIPES). The SPAC is usually run by private equity sponsor who is already neck deep in deal making. 
 
The word “blind” is appropriate. At the time of the SPAC IPO, investors do not know what the deal might be (in fact it would be illegal if they did).
 
So why would someone invest blindly? 
 
It comes down to the SPAC rules.
 
First, the SPAC has a deadline to find a deal. Maximum of 3 years but usually capped at 24 months.
 
If the SPAC does not find an acquisition in that timeframe the investors get their money back – with interest. 
 
Second, if you don’t like the acquisition, you can ask for your money back. 
 
At the time of merger (this is called the De-SPAC transaction), the SPAC is required to offer SPAC shareholders the option to redeem for $10.
 
Again – no harm, no foul.
 
Hedge funds like SPACs because they are what is called “a free carry”. That is to say – a free shot on goal with an opt-out clause. 
 
But the biggest winners in a SPAC are the founders – also called the sponsors. They manage the IPO and look for the deal – and in return they usually get 20% of the SPAC shares – for free!
 
It is a sweet setup, but only if they get a good deal. Which means their interests are aligned with investors.
 
But it does create a hurdle – any deal the SPAC finds needs to overcome this 20% free ticket for the founder.
 
Some of them do.
 

Nikola Nuts and Bolts

 
At the close of the transaction between VectoIQ and Nikola the share structure consists of:
 
  • VectoIQ SPAC shareholders owning 23 million shares and another 23 million warrants (at $11.50)
  • Founders owning 6.64 million shares of stock
  • 52.5 million shares from an additional financing done at the time of the acquisition (at $10)
  • Nikola shareholders owning 320.7 million shares
 
In total there are about 428 million shares outstanding (including in-the-money warrants). At the current price of $34 that values the company at $14.5 billion.
 
In this case the sponsors at VectoIQ found a deal that more than made up for the free founder shares.
 
Is Nikola worth that much? That is going to depend on your take on the electric/hydrogen vehicle market. 
 
In their slide deck, Nikola estimates 14,000 BEVs and 30,000 FCEV sales in 2027. With estimated EBITDA margins of 12.8%, the company forecasts EBITDA could be $1.35 billion at that time.
Source: VectoIQ May Investor Presentation
 
If that turns out to be right, then maybe Nikola will not look quite so expensive. Regardless, you can’t argue that early investors in VectoIQ did well for themselves. Those investors paid $10 for a unit. That is one share, one warrant. With the stock now trading at $34, they are making out like bandits.
 

Some Winners, Many Losers

 
Recent SPAC successes like Virgin Galactic (SPCE – NASDAQ), Nikola and DraftKings (DKNG – NASDAQ) conjure up big hopes. But not every SPAC ends well. In fact, more often then not, they flop. 
 
More recent SPACs with an energy bent have struggled to get out of the gate. Black Ridge Acquisition Corp (AESE – NASDAQ) raised $138 million in 2018 to do deals in the energy sector before doing an about face and buying WPT Entertainment and an esports business called Allied eSports. The stock last traded at under $2. 
 

How to Play the SPAC Market

 
There are THREE ways to play the SPAC market. That’s because there are usually THREE listings for each SPAC.
 
The first is to buy a new SPAC IPO out of the gate. New symbols will trade with a “.U” extension – this means you are buying the unit – the share and the warrant. The warrant will give this unit some extra value, but often only 10-40 cents. So you if you don’t like the deal, you’re only losing that premium when you return your stock to the company.
 
But at some point (usually about 30 days) the warrant starts to trade separately; it gets stripped out. When that happens, the leverage–and the risk–is in the warrant. It often trades with FIVE letters in the symbol, and ends in a W. If the deal–like VTIQ–ends up being hot and the stock goes from $10 – $25–well, the warrant is a 10-30 bagger very quickly. But if there is no deal for the SPAC or the market doesn’t like the deal, the warrant can become worthless. Warrants can trade for well over $1 sometimes.
 
That means be discerning. Do your homework on the deal making team. Also check the deal terms and disclosures around the sector they are looking at entering.
 
Thirdly, you can just buy the stock after it gets separated out. So to repeat, in SPACs you almost always have the choice of buying the stock, the warrant, or the unit with both.
 
Maybe a better question is–WHEN do you buy it. You can buy it blind right away or the second way to play a SPAC is to wait for a deal. 
 
Remember, the biggest winners – Nikola, Draft Kings and Virgin Galactic – only traded up modestly after the announcement for a time. Virgin Galactic actually traded well below the $10 IPO price for a time.
 
In other words – even with the best of the SPACs, there was no rush to buy.
 
What is clear is that the SPAC model is gaining momentum right now. We should expect more companies coming to market through SPAC mergers. Given that some of these names are catching investor attention, it is a space worth keeping an eye on.
 
Keith
 
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