Exclusive-U.S. SEC cracks down a second time on SPAC equity accounting
treatment - sources
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[September 28, 2021] By
Anirban Sen, Chris Prentice and Krystal Hu
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Expanding
its crackdown on the SPAC sector, the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission has told top auditors of blank-check acquisition companies to
account more strictly for public shares in these shells, according to
multiple industry accountants and lawyers familiar with the change.
SEC staff have privately told top auditors of Special Purpose
Acquisition Companies, or SPACs, that "redeemable" shares issued by
these shells must be treated as temporary - known as "mezzanine" -
equity, in a break from the long-standing industry practice of treating
them as permanent equity, the people said.
The change will cause most SPACs to fall below the minimum equity
capital requirement of Nasdaq's Capital Market tier, pushing SPACs
looking to list on Nasdaq to its Global Market tier, which has no equity
requirement, the people said.
The development marks the second time this year that the SEC has
tightened SPAC accounting guidance and the latest salvo in the agency's
broader crackdown on the SPAC deals market, a booming business for Wall
Street over the past 18 months.
While the long-term implications of the change in listing status for
SPACs in the pipeline were unclear, some industry attorneys and auditors
said it was another worrying sign that the SEC was looking for ways to
upend longstanding practices in the SPAC market.
"It's a change in accounting treatment and a change in the way the SEC
views the issue," said Jeffrey Weiner, chief executive of Marcum LLP,
which handles over 40% of SPAC audit work, according to data from
SPACInsider.
SPACs are listed shell companies used to take private companies public,
sidestepping the more traditional and lengthy initial public offering
process. In an era of free-flowing money, more than $100 billion in SPAC
deals have been inked so far this year.
With less initial regulatory vetting than IPOs, the SEC has said the
boom in SPAC deals puts investors at risk. It has increased scrutiny of
the sector, from SPAC marketing
https://www.reuters.com/article/
us-sec-spac/sec-warns-against-investing-in-spacs-based-solely-on-celebrity-backing-idUSKBN2B22M5
and fees to disclosures, conflicts of interest and accounting treatment.
In April, the SEC issued guidance
https://www.reuters.com/business/
legal/us-securities-regulator-issues-accounting-guidance-spacs-2021-04-13
suggesting hundreds of SPACs should account for equity warrants as debt,
putting a damper on the market and driving efforts https://www.reuters.com/business/wall-street-grapples-with-new-spac-equity-contracts-after-regulator-crackdown-2021-06-08
to test new contracts.
In recent months, SEC staff have also questioned whether redeemable
shares in the listed SPAC shell should be treated as permanent equity,
since shareholders have the right to sell those back to the SPAC if they
do not like the deal it proposes.
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The seal of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is
seen at their headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 12, 2021.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
In recent weeks, the SEC has told the auditors in private discussions that they
should treat those redeemable shares entirely as "temporary equity," the sources
said.
The SEC's new stance is in line with its official guidance on how to treat
redeemable shares and Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.
However, because of the unique terms of some SPAC charters, which require they
hold a minimum permanent equity balance of $5 million, SPAC auditors had long
treated redeemable shares as permanent equity in order to meet that threshold,
without objection from the SEC, the people said.
"The current accounting treatment had been in place and accepted for years,"
said Marcum's Weiner. He said some Marcum partners have spoken with SEC staff
about the issue.
Other major SPAC auditors include Withum and KPMG. Spokespeople for the two
companies declined to comment.
The sources said it was unclear if the SEC would issue public guidance on the
issue. The regulator declined to comment.
LISTINGS CHANGE
A Nasdaq spokesperson confirmed that the accounting change had forced SPACs to
switch their planned listings from its Capital Market to its Global Market.
While the SEC's new stance is unlikely to be as disruptive for the SPAC industry
as its April guidance, it is creating a headache for Nasdaq. SPACs have
traditionally listed on its Capital Market, which is generally for companies
focused on capital raising and which has minimum capital requirements.
While its Global Market has no minimum capital requirement, it does require
SPACs to have 400 shareholders, 100 more than the Capital Market, which could be
problematic for some SPACs.
Nasdaq is working on a rule change that would allow companies to list on the
Global Market with 300 shareholders, the spokesperson said. It was unclear when
that would come into effect.
Currently, nine SPACs trade on the Global Market, according to Nasdaq data, all
of which listed since June 2021, when the SEC began to question the treatment of
redeemable shares.
(Editing by Michelle Price and Dan Grebler)
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