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				Warren's forthcoming "SPAC Accountability Act of 2022" would 
				increase the legal liability for a range of parties involved in 
				such deals, enhance investor disclosures and lock up for a 
				longer period early investors which bankroll the deals. 
 While Warren's bill may struggle to gain traction this year with 
				lawmakers focused on the midterm elections, it's likely to 
				increase pressure on the industry which is already facing 
				proposed new curbs from the U.S. Securities and Exchange 
				Commission (SEC).
 
 Wall Street's biggest gold rush of recent years, SPACs are shell 
				companies that raise funds through a public listing with the 
				goal of acquiring a private company and taking it public.
 
 The process allows the target to sidestep the stiffer regulatory 
				scrutiny of a traditional initial public offering (IPO), 
				sparking criticism from Warren and others that too many deals 
				are of poor quality or suffer from lax due diligence.
 
 In the report on Tuesday, Warren also detailed an investigation 
				she began last year on SPACs and their backers, which found 
				investors had been harmed and further regulation was needed.
 
 “This investigation found that Wall Street insiders have used 
				SPACs as their own personal piggy banks while retail investors 
				have suffered," Warren said in a prepared statement. "This 
				industry is rife with fraud, self-dealing and inflated fees, and 
				the SEC and Congress should continue to act to crack down on 
				these abuses.”
 
 Investment banks have raked in billions of dollars feeding the 
				frenzy for SPAC deals, which have left many investors with 
				losses, Reuters reported this month.
 
 If finalized, SEC rules proposed in March would largely close 
				current loopholes by offering SPAC investors protections similar 
				to those they would receive during the IPO process.
 
 Warren's bill would build on the SEC's proposal by codifying its 
				changes into law. It would expand the definition of underwriter 
				to include any party that facilitates the takeover of the target 
				company, increasing legal liability for financial institutions, 
				SPAC sponsors and boards, and the target company.
 
 Additionally, it would lock-up SPAC sponsors for longer, 
				preventing them from cashing out before the merged company can 
				produce any of the projected profits. The bill would also 
				increase the disclosures required in relation to the target 
				takeover.
 
 (Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli; Writing by Michelle Price; 
				Editing by Andrea Ricci)
 
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