TRAVEL TIP
Traveling to the Caribbean? Take
Mace™. Here’s ABC News’s Jeffrey
Kofman on St. Maartin and Aruba (“Black was
asleep in her student apartment on the university campus. It was about 4 a.m.
She said she remembers hearing a noise . . .”). And here’s Time Magazine on Jamaica (“The
Most Homophobic Place on Earth?”).
BOM-BOM-BOM,
BOM-BOM IRAN . . .
Let’s hope this is nothing more than tasteless dark humor.
SPAC SPEC
Here’s an interesting speculation
I do not recommend. I’ve bought some
myself, but that’s me. I can’t help
myself sometimes. If you buy it and lose, I could never
forgive myself.
But let me back up. Remember how, in the days of the South Sea Bubble,
people were raising money for all manner of ocean-faring expeditions? No? Well,
this was the early Eighteenth Century, so even I would have been too young to remember
it clearly. (Where is Strom Thurmond
when you need him?) But it
happened. And one of the ventures was
famously undertaken for an enterprise the specifics of which “could not be
revealed” – yet found funding anyway.
Well, today, apparently,
accomplished financiers are raising money for SPAC’s –
Single Purpose Acquisition Companies – and, although it is a small and arcane
field about which I know very little (where is due diligence when you need it?),
I am told it works this way, or at least did in the case of Aldabra
Acquisition Corporation:
The company is formed by
someone with a reputation for being good at this, and raises a bunch of money
to make an acquisition – just what acquisition that might be remaining to be
seen. In return for their cash, investors
get stock and warrants and the promise
(if I’ve got this right) that if no acquisition is made within 18 months – the
first dozen of which have now passed – yes, their warrants to buy more stock will expire worthless, but
they will get their original cash returned to them.
So their main risk is losing
the use of the cash for eighteen months . . .
while, if the acquisition does get done and proves savvy, well, happy days are
here again.
And what some of the initial
investors do, apparently, is sell the warrants in the public market, so that,
even if no acquisition is made, they make an immediate 12% or so on their investment,
100% of which is then returned 18 months later.
Not so terrible. And if an
acquisition is made, their stock
itself may rise smartly. They win small
or they win big, but they win.
So yesterday I bought a bunch
of the warrants – ALBAW.OB is the symbol
– at 70 cents each, and in an aggregate amount I can afford to lose.
I’ve done no research on this
except to know that someone smarter than me will lose three times as much if
this doesn’t work (famous last words, by the way) . . . and that the people behind
all this will lose a million or two in expenses if they don’t wind up concluding
an acquisition before the clock runs out.
In that sorry case, my 70
cents per warrant is gone. Game over. The gamble is that they will do a deal, and that the warrants will rise smartly when they
do.
At which point one could
either sell them for a short-term capital gain or exercise them and hold the
underlying stock in hope of a lightly-taxed long-term capital gain sometime
later.
That’s it.
“Ah,” you’re thinking. “It has come to this.”
Well, yes it has: there is a
limit to the number of times I can tell you to pay off your credit cards, quit
smoking, and buy fuel efficient cars.
The occasional SPAC spec adds zest.
It is the piquant sauce on an Antoine’s oyster.