The Economist May 21st 2022 Business 61Seeking purpose
United States, SPAC* initial public offeringsSource:Bloomberg*Special-purpose acquisition company
†To May 16th1100
75
50
25
0
2019 20 21 22†Proceeds, $bn
Completed/
liquidated
Announced
Searching300
200
100
0
2019 20 21 22†Number of dealsStockmarketlistingsWhere did the
cash go?
spacs raised billions for mergers.
As deals dry up, we follow the moneyA
merican capitalismhas a special rev
erence  for  large  numbers.  They  can
frighten  as  debt  or  reassure  as  backstops.
The  $260bn  raised  by  specialpurpose  ac
quisition companies (spacs) since the start
of 2020 lacks the multitrilliondollar aura
of  federal  debt  or  America’s  pandemic
stimulus.  It  is  nevertheless  big  enough  to
have  become  a  defining  symbol  of  recent
market mania. 
spacs used to be a curious capitalmar
kets  sideshow:  complex,  obscure,  hardly
novel.  A  conventional  initial  public  offer
ing underwritten by investment banks was
the marker of corporate maturity; merging
with a pile of cash and entering the stock
market  by  the  backdoor  was  not.  This
changed  when  stockmarkets  rallied  from
their  covidinduced  lows:  more  than  800
spacs raised capital between May 2020 and
December  2021.  Underwriting  fees  were
collected;  questionable  incentives  and
complexity remained. 
This  year  investors  appear  to  have  re
membered why some disliked spacs in the
first place. Few new blankcheque vehicles
are  being  listed.  Rising  interest  rates  are
chipping away at the present value of spec
ulative  firms’  future  profits  and  invest
ment banks are pulling back from this kind
of faddish financial engineering in expec
tation of tough new duediligence rules. 
At  the  same  time,  many  existing  spacs
are having trouble finding merger targets.IndianbusinessA new foundation
G
autamadaniisamanoffewwords
but,  as  Asia’s  richest  tycoon,  plenty  of
means.  On  May  15th  he  agreed  to  pay
$10.5bn  for  Ambuja  Cement,  India’s  sec
ondbiggest  cementmaker,  controlled  by
Holcim,  a  Swiss  buildingmaterials  behe
moth.  Mr  Adani’s  terse  statement  accom
panying  the  deal  belies  its  significance.  It
will  be  the  largest  outright  acquisition  of
an  Indian  company  since  Walmart,  an
American  supermarket  titan,  purchased
Flipkart, an Indian emerchant, in 2018.
Ambuja was founded by Narotam Sekh
saria, a Bombay cotton trader with a degree
in  chemical  engineering  but  no  back
ground  in  cement.  He  managed  to  turn  a
commodity  into  a  consumer  product
through  a  clever  slogan  (“giant  strength”)
and an eyecatching logo (a giant clutching
a  building).  After  courting  Ambuja  for
years,  Holcim  succeeded  only  in  200507,
as Mr Sekhsaria’s health began to fail. 
Since  then  the  business  has  flailed.  In
the past decade, according to Kotak Securi
ties,  a  broker,  capacity  at  Holcim’s  Indian
holdings expanded by less than 2% a year,
compared with a rate of 10% for UltraTech,
India’s biggest cementmaker, and 13% for
Shree Cement, an upstart. Holcim has not
disclosed  how  much  it  paid  for  its  Indian
venture.  One  analyst  puts  the  figure  at
around  $2bn.  Given  that  it  will  receive
$6.4bn  for  its  63%  stake,  this  would
amount to an adequate but unexciting an
nual return of perhaps 8%. (The other $4bnorsoMrAdaniispaying will go to Ambuja’s
minority shareholders.)
The deal is more favourable for Holcim
in  other  ways.  It  fits  in  with  the  firm’s
broader  shift  towards  a  greener,  less  ce
mentcentric  business.  In  recent  years  it
has sold cement units in Brazil, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Russia, Sri Lanka and Vietnam. 
Critically,  it  shouldn’t  attract  antitrust
scrutiny, whereas success by one of the two
other bidders might well have raised trust
busters’ concerns. UltraTech, controlled by
the Birla family, is India’s biggest cement
maker.  The  Jindals’  jswGroup,  a  big  steel
producer, has a growing cement business.
The Competition Commission of India has
been looking into a possible cement cartel
since at least 2010. A case involving Holcim
is  before  the  Supreme  Court.  Another  in
vestigation  was  reportedly  launched  in-  As  part  of  the  sale,  Holcim  will  be
 spared from any judgment, its chief execu
 tive, Jan Jenisch, told analysts.
 But it was not solely because Mr Adani
 has no existing cement operations that he
 prevailed in the fight for Ambuja. What he
 brought also mattered. The Adani Group
 owns power utilities, useful in running en
 ergyhungry kilns, and India’s biggest net
 work of ports to ship the stuff. Its coalfired
 plants provide a byproduct, flyash, re
 quired for cementmaking. Most impor
 tant, the tycoon displays anuncanny abili
 ty to raise capital. Paired withvaulting am
 bition, it is a hard mix to beat. n
M UMBAI
Asia’s richest man cements his grip on India’s heavy industry