Insights

SPAC 4.0: From Spectacular Failures to a Disciplined Renaissance

Key Takeaways:

  • SPACs have evolved through four distinct phases: From the speculative chaos of SPAC 1.0 to the celebrity-fueled boom and bust of SPAC 3.0, the market has now entered SPAC 4.0 — a more disciplined era marked by stronger governance, longer timelines, and performance-based incentives. These reforms aim to raise the success rate of SPAC deals to 40-50%.
  • Past failures highlight the risks of hype over fundamentals: High-profile collapses like Nikola, Lucid Motors, and WeWork underscore the dangers of taking pre-revenue or structurally flawed companies public too early. Weak due diligence and speculative projections were common threads in these failures.
  • SPAC 4.0 offers a more sustainable path, but legal risks remain: New SEC rules and market discipline have improved SPAC structures, but litigation and enforcement risks persist. Sponsors must prioritize transparency and readiness for shareholder scrutiny to succeed in this new environment.

The Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC) market has experienced one of the most dramatic arcs in modern financial history. From the euphoric boom of 2021 — when 613 SPACs raised $162 billion — to the crushing losses that left most de-SPAC companies trading far below their IPO price, the sector seemed destined to be remembered as a cautionary tale of speculative excess. Yet in 2025, a new chapter has begun. Reinvented as “SPAC 4.0,” these vehicles are re-emerging with tighter discipline, stronger governance, and a more sober outlook.

How did the market reach this point, why did so many early SPACs collapse, and what innovations define today’s more measured renaissance?

Understanding the Evolution of SPACs

At their core, SPACs are publicly traded shell companies that raise money through an IPO to merge with a private company, offering a faster and often less burdensome path to the public markets. Over the past three decades, SPACs have evolved in four distinct phases:

  • SPAC 1.0 (1990s-2010s): A “wild west” era defined by quick fundraising, minimal oversight, and a fraud rate exceeding 25%. Average deal sizes hovered at $20-$50 million.
  • SPAC 2.0 (2010-2020): Institutional legitimacy arrived with trust accounts and redemption rights, but misaligned incentives still plagued the model. Only 15-25% of deals created lasting value.
  • SPAC 3.0 (2020-2022): The boom and bust. Celebrities lent their names, retail investors piled in, and valuations reached unsustainable heights. At its 2021 peak, SPACs accounted for 64% of all IPOs. But the party ended abruptly, with de-SPAC companies losing an average of 67% of their value.
  • SPAC 4.0 (2024-present): A disciplined revival. With stricter SEC disclosure rules, longer search periods, performance-based incentives, and higher revenue thresholds for targets, this new era aspires to raise the SPAC success rate to 40-50%.

The Reckoning: Billions in Value Destroyed

The numbers are staggering. From 2021 to 2023, cumulative de-SPAC value destruction reached hundreds of billions of dollars. More than 90% of de-SPAC companies still trade below $10, the original IPO price.

While a handful of names — DraftKings, SoFi, and Grindr — have defied the odds, most high-profile SPACs failed spectacularly. These collapses reveal common patterns of speculative projections, weak governance, and inadequate due diligence.

Case Studies: Spectacular Failures

Nikola Corporation: Technology by Hype

Once valued at $27.6 billion, Nikola promised to revolutionize zero-emissions trucking. Instead, it became the poster child for SPAC-driven hype. Allegations of fraud, production delays, and financial shortfalls culminated in its February 2025 bankruptcy filing. The company’s downfall underscores the perils of taking pre-revenue businesses public on the back of glossy marketing rather than proven technology.

Lucid Motors: Premium Dreams, Production Nightmares

Lucid entered the public markets with aspirations of becoming the “Tesla killer.” Yet repeated production shortfalls, cash burn, and supply chain disruptions eroded confidence. Despite producing a high-quality product, Lucid’s capital-intensive model proved unsustainable. Its trajectory demonstrates why SPACs are ill-suited for industries requiring decades of scale and expertise.

WeWork: A $9 Billion Flameout

After a failed traditional IPO, WeWork sought salvation through a SPAC merger. But its structural flaws — long-term lease obligations paired with short-term memberships — were irreconcilable. By November 2023, WeWork filed for bankruptcy, cementing its status as a cautionary tale about aggressive growth and fragile economics.

Case Studies: Success Stories

Not every SPAC ended in disaster. Some used the model responsibly, showing that the vehicle can still provide an effective path to liquidity when fundamentals are sound.

Grindr: The Right Deal at the Right Time

In 2022, Grindr merged with Tiga Acquisition Corp. and saw its stock price soar. Strong brand equity, a loyal user base, and strategic governance reforms positioned the company for success. The deal also marked a milestone for LGBTQ+ representation in public markets.

SoFi: Building a Financial Superapp

SoFi leveraged its 2021 SPAC proceeds strategically, acquiring a bank charter, diversifying revenue streams, and charting a clear path to profitability. By 2024/25, it reached sustained GAAP profitability, transforming market perception from speculative fintech to durable operator. SoFi illustrates how disciplined capital allocation and sponsor quality can overcome structural weaknesses.

The Sectoral Heatmap: Where SPACs Failed Most

Certain sectors proved particularly vulnerable:

  • High Failure: Electric vehicles (Nikola, Fisker), space tech (Virgin Orbit), consumer micromobility (Bird Global), and biotech (23andMe, Pear Therapeutics).
  • Moderate Failure: Real estate tech (WeWork) and energy.
  • Lower Failure: FinTech and SaaS, where companies like SoFi and DraftKings showed resilience.

This heatmap reinforces a critical lesson: capital-intensive or speculative industries rarely thrive under the compressed timelines and structural constraints of SPACs.

SPAC 4.0: What’s Different Now?

The latest generation of SPACs incorporates several key reforms:

  • Performance-Based Promotes: Instead of automatic 20% rewards, sponsor compensation is now increasingly tied to stock-price hurdles or earn-outs.
  • Longer Search Periods: The typical 18-24 month deadline has stretched to 30-36 months, allowing more time for due diligence.
  • Revenue Requirements: Many SPACs now target companies with $50 million+ in annual revenue, discouraging purely speculative listings.
  • Stronger SEC Oversight: The 2024 rules mandate greater transparency around sponsor pay, dilution, and conflicts of interest.

Together, these changes aim to realign incentives, reduce agency costs, and restore investor confidence.

Litigation and Enforcement Risks

Even as SPAC 4.0 gains traction, legal scrutiny remains intense. In late 2024, the SEC charged Cantor Fitzgerald for misleading statements in two SPAC IPOs, resulting in a $6.75 million penalty. Meanwhile, Delaware courts continue to test the limits of disclosure obligations, with some MultiPlan-style claims dismissed but others allowed to proceed.

Sponsors and advisors must therefore prioritize disclosure, strengthen due diligence, and prepare for shareholder suits as part of the new normal.

The Path Forward

Will SPAC 4.0 endure, or is it merely another cycle of speculative enthusiasm? Four insights stand out:

  1. Capital Structure Determines Destiny: High redemption rates continue to predict poor outcomes.
  2. Fundamentals Trump Hype: Companies with real revenue and profitability prospects are the only ones thriving.
  3. Innovation Drives Renaissance: Earn-outs, performance gates, and disclosure reforms represent genuine progress.
  4. Regulation Enables Growth: SEC oversight provides a sturdier foundation, even if structural conflicts remain unresolved.

For companies considering SPACs in 2025 and beyond, the bar has been raised. Success requires established revenue, reasonable valuations, public-company readiness, and transparent governance.

What SPAC 4.0 Means for the Future of Public Listings

The story of SPACs is one of boom, bust, and tentative revival. The failures of Nikola, Lucid, and WeWork exposed the dangers of hype-driven listings. But the successes of Grindr and SoFi prove that, under the right conditions, SPACs can still serve as a viable alternative to traditional IPOs.

SPAC 4.0 represents more than a cosmetic rebranding. It reflects a market that has absorbed painful lessons and is now attempting to balance innovation with discipline. Whether this renaissance proves sustainable will depend on whether sponsors, regulators, and investors can maintain alignment, or whether the cycle of exuberance and disappointment repeats once again.

About the Authors

Louis Lehot is a partner in the Silicon Valley office of Foley & Lardner LLP, focusing on corporate finance, M&A, and securities law for emerging growth and technology companies.
Alexandre Turqueto is an associate in the New York office of Foley & Lardner LLP, focusing on M&A, private equity, venture financings, and securities law for emerging growth and technology companies.

AUTHOR(S):

Louis Lehot

POSTED:

This blog is made available by Foley & Lardner LLP (“Foley” or “the Firm”) for informational purposes only. It is not meant to convey the Firm’s legal position on behalf of any client, nor is it intended to convey specific legal advice. Any opinions expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of Foley & Lardner LLP, its partners, or its clients. Accordingly, do not act upon this information without seeking counsel from a licensed attorney. This blog is not intended to create, and receipt of it does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. Communicating with Foley through this website by email, blog post, or otherwise, does not create an attorney-client relationship for any legal matter. Therefore, any communication or material you transmit to Foley through this blog, whether by email, blog post or any other manner, will not be treated as confidential or proprietary. The information on this blog is published “AS IS” and is not guaranteed to be complete, accurate, and or up-to-date. Foley makes no representations or warranties of any kind, express or implied, as to the operation or content of the site. Foley expressly disclaims all other guarantees, warranties, conditions and representations of any kind, either express or implied, whether arising under any statute, law, commercial use or otherwise, including implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, title and non-infringement. In no event shall Foley or any of its partners, officers, employees, agents or affiliates be liable, directly or indirectly, under any theory of law (contract, tort, negligence or otherwise), to you or anyone else, for any claims, losses or damages, direct, indirect special, incidental, punitive or consequential, resulting from or occasioned by the creation, use of or reliance on this site (including information and other content) or any third party websites or the information, resources or material accessed through any such websites. In some jurisdictions, the contents of this blog may be considered Attorney Advertising. If applicable, please note that prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.