One of the hottest pandemic-era trends in investing is receding back into obscurity after more than a billion dollars in losses for backers of special-purpose acquisition companies.

In the first four months of 2023 alone, sponsors of SPACs with some $74 billion in cash will need to find targets to buy or move to dissolve their funds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Assuming the shopping spree comes up empty, this will likely mark the end of a frenzy that saw more than 800 of the funds raise almost a quarter-trillion dollars in 2020 and 2021. The euphoria has worn off, with hundreds of sponsorship teams expected to throw in the towel through early next year.

It’s a painful comeuppance for an industry that during its go-go days attracted legions of retail investors for projects that were tied to celebrities, politicians and athletes — but more often than not turned out to be a bust. The mania turned Chamath Palihapitiya into the “SPAC King” and burned investors backing companies tied to flashy names like Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter, Shaquille O’Neal and Martha Stewart. Now, the funds will likely return to being a niche product led by experienced professional investors.

“They are like so many internet companies of the late 1990s — they were never going to make it,” said Matt Maley, the chief market strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. “They only existed because there was excess liquidity in the system. There will be very, very good companies formed through SPACs, but there are a lot of them that were only trying to make money for themselves.”

SPACs work by raising money in initial public offerings, with the goal of buying a business that will be identified later on. The industry took Wall Street and retail traders by storm early in the pandemic when easy money and cooped up investors flocked to risky assets that seemed to only go up.

That changed this year. Nearly 100 firms successfully completed SPAC mergers in 2022, with most having enterprise values below $2 billion, data from SPAC Research shows. But their performance has been terrible. The median post-merger company that debuted this year has lost 70% of its value, quadruple the S&P 500’s losses.

Even worse, more than one-third of the roughly 400 companies that have gone public via SPAC trade below $2, far from the $10 level at which they typically go public. The floundering performance is a signal that a trend of blowups will only continue with companies going bankrupt, opting to get taken out by competitors at fire sale prices, or going private again.

“Many of the poorly performing de-SPACs may run out of cash in the next 12 months,” said Taylor Sherman, a director at CohnReznick Advisory. He warned that the electric-vehicle and biopharmaceutical industries may see a greater number of former SPACs running out of cash

Of course, for the lucky few SPAC investors who timed their trades perfectly, there were fortunes to be made. The SPAC that merged with electric van and bus maker Arrival SA more than tripled in the weeks after the deal was announced in November 2020. Opendoor Technologies Inc., which went public through a merger with a Palihapitiya SPAC, soared to $39 last February.

That said, since then both stocks have crashed more than 95% from those highs.

Digital World Acquisition Corp., the SPAC set to merge with Donald Trump’s media firm, surged more than 1,650% to $175 a share in the two days after the deal was announced in October 2021. It closed at $21.43 on Wednesday.

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