Tuesday, July 31, 2007

SPACs snack on chips and wafers

Another special purpose acquisition company has grabbed a semiconductor firm.

Ascend Acquisition Corp., which raised $38.5 million in an IPO in May, said Tuesday it has agreed to acquire ePak Resources Pte. Ltd., a maker of chip handling equipment for semiconductor makers.

SPACs
, also known as "blank check" companies, are founded without an operating business. Once they go public, they have 18 months to complete a deal using about 80% of their net assets. SPACs that fail to make an acquisition are liquidated and the cash is returned to shareholders.

Ascend was pretty vague in its S-1, originally filed in February 2006, about what industry it aimed to pursue — the filing only said it might look at the "manufacturing, services or distribution" markets.

With ePak, it gets an eight-year-old, profitable chip equipment maker, with $36.2 million in annual sales, that's been growing at a decent clip.Ascend doesn't have the tech star power of Acquicor Technology Inc., a blank-check company led by Gil Amelio, the former CEO of Apple Computer and National Semiconductor Corp. Acquicor last year announced the $260 million acquisition of Jazz Semiconductor Inc., a specialty chip wafer maker.

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