Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Blank Checks Cashing in During Decline

January 23rd, 2008 by Lilla Zuill

While traditional initial public offerings on U.S. stock exchanges have floundered, the once-obscure “blank check” arena has only gained traction so far this year, becoming a kind of safe playground for investors, and a retreat for some private equity players finding it tougher to raise debt now that credit terms have tightened.

Four weeks into 2008, 5 IPOs by so-called blank check companies– also called special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs – have tapped investors for about $4 billion. The latest, activist Nelson Peltz’s Trian Acquisition I Corp, was expected to raise $750 million on Wednesday.

In stark comparison, only one mainstream IPO has managed to stir up enough interest — Williams Pipeline Partners which raised $325 million last week – to actually make it to market, and has disappointed since its debut.

Blank check companies, which are formed to acquire other businesses and are little more than a shell until an acquisition is made, took off in 2007, accounting for roughly every fourth new U.S. listing, raising nearly $12 billion.

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