Coinbase CFO Says Direct Listing Can Be Bumpy Path: Deals Update

(Bloomberg) — The hardest part of going public through a direct listing was connecting the supply and the demand for shares, according to Alesia Haas, Coinbase Inc.’s chief financial officer.

“You’re not allowed to ask your investors what they plan to sell, and so you go in with a lot of unknowns,” Haas said at the Bloomberg Deals Summit, adding that this can create a “bumpy path,” for a listing.

The cryptocurrency exchange went public in April, and is currently trading with a market valuation of almost $46 billion.

Haas also said Coinbase didn’t want to be the first company to use the new option that allows private companies to raise money as part of a direct listing.

“We were the first crypto company, and we really wanted to see where the stock would trade once we were public, once we were fully liquid,” she said. The company instead raised money later, once the stock had stabilized.

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Ackman SPAC Deal Shows Nimble Markets, Cohen Says

Bill Ackman’s potential SPAC deal is indicative of how innovative capital markets can be, according to blank-check pioneer Betsy Cohen.

The transaction, which could see Ackman’s special purpose acquisition company take a pre-IPO stake in Vivendi SE’s Universal Music Group while continuing to pursue a separate business combination, isn’t something that everyone will be able to pull off, Cohen said.

“I’m sure there will be others that will try,” said Cohen. “Will they do it with success? I’m not quite sure.”

Capital markets are “plastic,” Cohen added. “I think we saw the plastic being stretched in this particular transaction, but in a very creative way.”

Moelis Says Five-Day Week Won’t Be Post-Covid Norm

Ken Moelis says five-day weeks might not be the norm for everyone in the post-pandemic word and that he’ll let people decide what’s best for them.

Though the veteran dealmaker maintains the office is a good place, where creativity can flourish, he acknowledged that a shift toward flexible working is also a generational one, and some younger company executives will be all for it. Moelis said he won’t impose his way of doing things on clients either.

The chief executive officer of investment bank Moelis & Co. also likened the market for meme stocks to gambling. A lot of people aren’t making an investment decision, they’re making an emotional one, he said.

“You’re in a global craps game where everybody is talking to each other and they’re having a blast,” Moelis said.

Moelis doesn’t see excess leverage in the market and notes a dramatic slowdown in restructuring work at his firm. But he’s not getting too comfortable, saying it’s left him wondering about the corners of the market where leverage might be lurking. Something like the collapse of Bill Hwang’s hedge fund, Archegos Capital Management, will happen again, according to Moelis.“Never underestimate people to devise a way to hide the risk they’re taking,” he said.

Expect a Rush to Do Deals Before Tax Changes

Companies could rush to do deals ahead of proposed changes to capital gains taxes by the U.S. administration of President Joe Biden, says Michal Katz, head of investment and corporate banking at Mizuho Financial Group Inc.

Some large shareholders in companies that may have been thinking about selling could be saying to themselves that it’s better to do it sooner rather than later, says Scott Barshay, chair of the corporate department at law firm Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison.

Barshay, Katz and EQT’s Marc Brown all agreed that the market for special purpose acquisition companies is here to stay, though Barshay sees a small slowdown in deals after a frantic start, and a flight to quality ahead. There will be fewer transactions involving smaller companies that haven’t yet built a compelling business case.“I think you’re going to see less deals where there’s really no cash flow and really no business yet,” Barshay said. Instead, there’ll be “a preponderance of good, strong companies using SPACs to go public”.

No Sign of A Slowdown in Dealmaking: Paul Weiss’s Barshay

Dealmaking is rampant across the board, says Barshay. Technology and health-care deals led the immediate recovery in global merger and acquisitions from the middle of last year, and now the industrials, financial services and consumer sectors are all catching up, he said.

Tellingly, there are no distressed deals, Barshay says. All of this is being fueled by an easy loan and bond market where financing is almost free. Barshay sees no slowdown unless there’s a big shift in the macroeconomic story.

Rainmakers Discuss 2021’s Record Market for M&A, Capital Markets Innovation

Dealmaking is booming, with more than $2 trillion of deals announced so far in 2021 as big acquirers move past the pandemic slowdown and blank-check companies snap up targets.At the same time, companies have raised more than $140 billion in IPOs in the biggest going-public drive since 2010, with SPACs not far behind. New unicorns are being minted almost every day as startup funding in the U.S. hits a record high, and CEO confidence — a crucial catalyst for transactions — is soaring.

Against the backdrop of one of the most exciting years in deals history, the Bloomberg Deals Summit invites the top dealmakers, CEOs, investors, and insiders sharing their insights on the landscape and debating whether this historic boom is likely to continue.

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