September 23, 2019
Welcome to the SPAC Research weekly newsletter.
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Mosaic Acquisition
On Monday 9/16/2019, Mosaic Acquisition Corp. (MOSC) announced a merger agreement to acquire Vivint Smart Home, Inc., a leading smart home technology company, in a deal with an initial enterprise value of $5.6bn. The acquisition would be the largest ever for a SPAC.
Vivint is majority owned by The Blackstone Group, which has been considering an IPO of the company since 2017. Blackstone is rolling 100% of its equity in the company and investing $100mm in cash. The deal also includes a $125mm PIPE from Fortress Investment Group, Mosaic's $150mm forward purchase commitment, and a $5mm purchase from Mosaic CEO David Maura under a 10b5-1 trading plan. The deal has a 10.35mm share maximum redemption scenario, or 30% of public shares.
It's nice to see Blackstone going the SPAC route again (the company retained a majority rollover stake when it sold assets to Osprey Acquisition Corp. (OSPR) last year). (Correction: the original version of this newsletter erroneously referred to Blackstone as having been an anchor investor in five SPACs since 2017. BlackRock, Inc., not Blackstone, has anchored five SPACs since 2017). Private equity portfolio companies have represented an increasing share of SPAC target ownership over the past few years, and it's encouraging for the space in general to see sophisticated institutions willing to use the SPAC route to take portfolio companies public.
The deal contains an additional wrinkle that we haven't really seen before in SPACs: an $81mm cash break-up fee. The fee itself is likely just a deterrent for any would-be competing bid, but it's worth considering what would happen if a SPAC were to receive a termination fee that was much larger than its obligations outside the trust account. This is not a professional legal opinion, but we don't see anything in a typical SPAC's charter documents that would provide for common stockholders to directly benefit from such a windfall. It wouldn't be a great look, but hypothetically could a sponsor wind up and redeem all public shares for the actual cash-in-trust amount, leaving the termination fee as an asset on the balance sheet for the benefit of Class B shareholders?
Redemption of Warrants for Stock
We thought this would be a useful time to take a closer look at the redemption for common stock feature that Mosaic and a handful of other SPACs have included in their warrant agreements since 2017. The feature allows issuers to exchange outstanding warrants post-closing -- if their stock's share price is above $10 -- for a number of common shares according to a pre-specified schedule. For example, if a company's common stock is trading at $12 with 30 months until warrant expiration, the company will be allowed to redeem outstanding warrants for 0.250 shares, resulting in an exchange value of $3.
We plotted the schedule on the chart below so it's easier to visualize what warrantholders would actually receive if a SPAC were to redeem its warrants this way.
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