Pimco stops sponsoring ex-Credit Suisse boss’ SPAC

Published Sat, Jun 18, 2022 · 07:32 AM
    • It’s very rare for one of a SPAC’s early backers to end their sponsorship after it starts trading
    • It’s very rare for one of a SPAC’s early backers to end their sponsorship after it starts trading PHOTO: The Business TImes

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    FUND management giant Pimco has ended its role as a sponsor of former Credit Suisse Group chief executive Tidjane Thiam’s fintech SPAC.

    Pimco, which was one of the financial backers behind the creation of Thiam’s Freedom Acquisition I Corp., has agreed to sell its entire stake in the sponsor vehicle for the blank-cheque firm to an affiliate of China Bridge Capital, according to a Jun 8 filing.

    Jamie Weinstein, Pimco’s head of corporate special situations, has resigned from the board of the special purpose acquisition company effective Jun 6. China Bridge Capital founder Edward Zeng has been appointed as a director in his place, Freedom Acquisition said in the filing. 

    It’s very rare for one of a SPAC’s early backers to end their sponsorship after it starts trading. Blank-cheque firms often attract investors based on their sponsors’ credentials. 

    Sponsors help front the money to set up a blank-cheque firm and, in return, stand to benefit handsomely from a successful deal. That’s become less of a sure bet as souring sentiment leaves hundreds of SPACs scrambling to find a target in a difficult environment. 

    Freedom Acquisition raised US$345 million in its February 2021 initial public offering (IPO) after Thiam increased the size of the transaction. It’s seeking a merger with a technology-enabled business in the financial services industry, according to previous filings. One of Pimco’s private funds was part of its sponsor group and committed to buying shares in the IPO. 

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    There’s been a sharp turnaround in sentiment from last year, when high-profile investors were flocking to support SPACs from financiers in Europe. Thiam’s blank-cheque IPO attracted investors including Francois Pinault, the billionaire founder of luxury conglomerate Kering. 

    The listing recorded an oversubscription level in the mid-teens, and about a third of the deal went to rich individuals’ family offices, Bloomberg News reported at the time. 

    Thiam is executive chairman of the SPAC, which is run by one of his key lieutenants, ex-investment banker Adam Gishen. Freedom Acquisition, which is still hunting for a deal, has until February 2023 to complete a transaction or it will need to return investors’ capital. 

    Silicon Valley venture capital firm Tribe Capital announced this month it’s ending the sponsorship of a SPAC it helped set up. The investment firm will no longer back the sponsor of Tribe Capital Growth Corp. I, which started trading last year and hasn’t found a target yet. BLOOMBERG

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