Spencer Rascoff, the serial entrepreneur behind Zillow, Hotwire, and Pacaso, is helping fuel the SPAC boom on Wall Street with the IPO of blank-check company Supernova.
The special purpose acquisition company hit the New York Stock Exchange Wednesday and raised $350 million with 35 million shares priced at $10 per share. Supernova is still exploring its merger options, but Rascoff said its target will likely be something within the tech industry.
"We'll be looking for companies worth between about $1 and $5 billion dollars," Rascoff told Cheddar. "It could be in a variety of areas within tech. It could be B2B SAAS. It could be e-commerce, adtech, direct-to-consumer. So we're casting our net pretty wide."
Supernova is just the latest in a string of SPAC offerings this year that is quickly becoming one of the most popular routes to the public market.
Rascoff said there are multiple benefits to choosing a SPAC instead of a traditional IPO.
"One of them is the price discovery," he said. "When you publicly list in a traditional IPO, on average tech companies now trade up 43 percent by the end of the first day. So they're leaving a huge amount of money on the table when they go public traditionally."
Another is speed, simplicity, and mentorship.
"A traditional IPO process takes almost a year," Rascoff said. "There's a lot of market risk and complexity, but if you go public by merging into a SPAC it's just a matter of a couple of weeks."
He also touted Supernova's lineup of experienced entrepreneurs and managers, including ex-Blackstone executive Robert Reid, Michael Clifton of The Carlyle Group, and hedge fund manager Alexander Klabin.
The appeal for investors is "optionality," he said. They invest based on the experience of the people behind the SPAC, but then they get a chance to basically bail out once the merger company is announced.
"SPAC investors are drawn to SPACs because for them it's a way to get sort of an early in on a potential IPO," he said. "For example, the investors that bought into the Supernova IPO are essentially betting that my team and I are going to go and identify a great target and merge into that company or have that company merge into us, and therefore they'll end up with sort of a toehold in that newly public company."
The Rev. Al Sharpton is set to lead a protest march on Wall Street to urge corporate America to resist the Trump administration’s campaign to roll back diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. The New York civil rights leader will join clergy, labor and community leaders Thursday in a demonstration through Manhattan’s Financial District that’s timed with the anniversary of the Civil Rights-era March on Washington in 1963. Sharpton called DEI the “civil rights fight of our generation." He and other Black leaders have called for boycotting American retailers that scaled backed policies and programs aimed at bolstering diversity and reducing discrimination in their ranks.
President Donald Trump's administration last month awarded a $1.2 billion contract to build and operate what's expected to become the nation’s largest immigration detention complex to a tiny Virginia firm with no experience running correction facilities.
Chipmaker Nvidia is poised to release a quarterly report that could provide a better sense of whether the stock market has been riding an overhyped artificial intelligence bubble or is being propelled by a technological boom that’s still gathering momentum.
Cracker Barrel said late Tuesday it’s returning to its old logo after critics — including President Donald Trump — protested the company’s plan to modernize.
Low-value imports are losing their duty-free status in the U.S. this week as part of President Donald Trump's agenda for making the nation less dependent on foreign goods. A widely used customs exemption for international shipments worth $800 or less is set to end starting on Friday. Trump already ended the “de minimis” rule for inexpensive items sent from China and Hong Kong, but having to pay import taxes on small parcels from everywhere else likely will be a big change for some small businesses and online shoppers. Purchases that previously entered the U.S. without needing to clear customs will be subject to the origin country’s tariff rate, which can range from 10% to 50%.
Southwest Airlines will soon require plus-size travelers to pay for an extra seat in advance if they can't fit within the armrests of one seat. This change is part of several updates the airline is making. The new rule starts on Jan. 27, the same day Southwest begins assigning seats. Currently, plus-size passengers can pay for an extra seat in advance and later get a refund, or request a free extra seat at the airport. Under the new policy, refunds are still possible but not guaranteed. Southwest said in a statement it is updating policies to prepare for assigned seating next year.
Cracker Barrel is sticking with its new logo. For now. But the chain is also apologizing to fans who were angered when the change was announced last week.
Elon Musk on Monday targeted Apple and OpenAI in an antitrust lawsuit alleging that the iPhone maker and the ChatGPT maker are teaming up to thwart competition in artificial intelligence.