Donald Trump’s SPAC deal may have violated securities laws, report says
Donald Trump’s recent venture into special purpose acquisition companies may have fallen afoul of securities laws, according to the New York Times.
The former president announced plans earlier this month to take his fledgling social media venture, Trump Media & Technology Group, public via a SPAC merger with Digital World Acquisition. The publicly traded shell company, which began trading on the Nasdaq in September under the ticker DWAC, subsequently saw its shares soar on the strength of robust investor interest, though the stock has since tapered off from its highs.
But on Thursday, the Times reported that DWAC may have skirted securities regulations since its founder, Florida-based financier Patrick Orlando, had been in discussions with Trump over the SPAC merger for months in advance of DWAC’s public market debut in September. The publication cited people with knowledge of the talks between the two men, who said that Trump and Orlando—who has launched no fewer than three other SPACs on U.S. exchanges—had been discussing a SPAC merger as early as last March.
Video: Trump media SPAC surges over 800%, valued beyond $8 billion (CNBC)
-
Don't bet prematurely on a soft landing, Jim Cramer warns The "Mad Money" host warned investors not to assume that the Fed will engineer a soft landing on Tuesday's episode of the show.
CNBC
-
We're just in a tight spot where there's not enough homes to meet the need, says UBS's Lovallo John Lovallo, UBS Senior Equity research analyst, joins 'Closing Bell: Overtime' to discuss housing market and trends in home builder companies.
CNBC
-
Two-Minute Drill: Natural gas, Antero & Qualcomm George Seay, Annandale Capital Founder, joins ‘Closing Bell: Overtime’ to give his take on natural gas, Antero and Qualcomm.
CNBC
By law, SPACs aren’t supposed to have such a merger planned at the time of their IPO, and are instead meant to merge with a private company only after they’ve begun trading on a stock exchange. Otherwise, as the Times notes, it would be too easy for private companies to use SPACs as “backdoor vehicles” to go public without the level of public disclosure and scrutiny they would usually be exposed to through a traditional listing. Since SPACs are meant to function as empty shell companies at the time of their IPO, such public disclosures are deemed unnecessary.
Lawyers and securities industry officials told the Times that the discussions between Trump and Orlando could draw inquiries from the Securities and Exchange Commission—especially since DWAC’s securities filings repeatedly state that the company had not engaged in any “substantive discussions, directly or indirectly,” with a target company.
The SPAC merger is expected to raise hundreds of millions of dollars for Trump’s new social media venture. Meanwhile, Orlando and other DWAC backers are expected to see hundreds of millions more in proceeds as a result of the stock’s performance, the Wall Street Journal reported this week.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
More From Fortune
-
Jeff Bezos and Andy Jassy feel singled out by the ‘egregious’ handling of Lina Khan’s FTC probe into Amazon Prime
Fortune
-
Amazon workers walked off the job at a major California air hub over pay and 95 degree temperatures
Fortune
-
Walmart’s earnings are trying to tell us something about inflation, consumer sentiment, and whether we’re headed for a recession
Fortune