Acorns Makes Public Debut via SPAC

Acorns Makes Public Debut via SPAC

Millennial investing app Acorns announced plans today to go public using a merger with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC).

The SPAC, Pioneer Merger Corp, is a blank check company founded in 2020 that aims to acquire Acorns in a deal valuing the fintech at $2.2 billion. The transaction is expected to complete in the second half of this year. Once finalized, Acorns will trade on the Nasdaq under the ticker OAKS.

Acorns’ new valuation of over $2 billion is more than double its last valuation. The company was estimated to be worth $860 million in January of 2019.

Prior to today’s announcement, Acorns was in the middle of another funding round, which would have added to the $207 million it had already raised since it was founded in 2014. Instead of closing another round of funding in the private markets, Acorns CEO Noah Kerner chose the SPAC route because he felt that Pioneer Merger Chairman John Christodoro was the right partner.

“Now was the time to go public to accelerate our growth and get the tools of responsible wealth-making in everyone’s hands as fast as possible, when they need it most,” Kerner told CNBC. “We just saw this as an accelerant on that journey.”

The timing is also right from a demand perspective. The pandemic, combined with media frenzy around meme stocks, fueled interest from new investors. Acorns clearly benefitted from this, having just completed its best quarter on record. The company doubled its number of subscribers compared to the fourth quarter of 2020 and now counts four million users.

Acorns has long been known for helping its millennial client base invest the “spare change” from their card purchases into index funds. The company has since expanded and now offers a debit card offering and more robust banking services such as mobile remote deposit check capture, direct deposit, check sending tools, and automated IRA investing for retirement.


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Payoneer To Go Public Via SPAC, Now Valued at $3.3 Billion

Payoneer To Go Public Via SPAC, Now Valued at $3.3 Billion

Cross-border payments expert Payoneer is the latest fintech to go public via SPAC merger. The New York-based company has agreed to merge with FTAC Olympus Acquisition Corp.

The transaction is expected to close during the first half of this year.

Once the reorganization is complete, the newly created holding company will be renamed Payoneer Global Inc. and the combined company will operate as Payoneer, a U.S. publicly listed entity. After the deal is finalized, Payoneer will have an estimated value of $3.3 billion.

Payoneer was founded in 2005 and offers multi-currency accounts to marketplaces, sellers, freelancers, gig workers, manufacturers, banks, suppliers, and buyers. With a mission to “democratize access to financial services and drive growth for digital businesses of all sizes from around the world,” Payoneer helps users pay and get paid globally as easily as they do locally.

“Payoneer is at the forefront of the rapid, global shift to digital commerce across all sectors,” said Betsy Z. Cohen, Chairman of the Board of Directors of FTAC Olympus Acquisition Corp. “Its innovative and unique high-tech, high-touch platform positions Payoneer at the epicenter of some of the most powerful and enduring trends driving global commerce today. Its proven ability to facilitate the overall growth of e-commerce through capabilities such as B2B payment digitization, global risk and compliance infrastructure, and the enablement for SMBs to rapidly grow and scale sets Payoneer apart.”

Payoneer has raised $270 million from 18 investors including CBC Capital and 83North. Scott Galit is CEO.

Today’s news of Payoneer opting to go public via a SPAC merger echoes a larger trend. Lately, we’ve seen a rising number of tech companies, including Bank Mobile and SoFi, use SPAC mergers to go public. Benefits of the IPO alternative include a faster and cheaper process, no qualification threshold, and no IPO window.


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