Trump’s App Truth Social Deal Goes Under Investigation as Digital World Acquisition Faces Subpoenas

The company planning to buy Donald Trump’s new social media business has disclosed a federal grand jury investigation that, it says, could impede or even prevent its acquisition of the Truth Social app.

Shares of Digital World Acquisition dropped 10 percent in morning trading on Monday as the company revealed that it has received subpoenas from a grand jury in New York.

The Justice Department subpoenas follow an ongoing probe by the Securities and Exchange Commission into whether Digital World broke rules by having substantial talks about buying Trump‘s company starting early last year before Digital World sold stock to the public for the first time in September, just weeks before its announcement that it would be buying Trump’s company.

Trump’s social media venture launched in February as he seeks a new digital stage to rally his supporters and fight Big Tech limits on speech, a year after he was banned from Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.

The Trump Media & Technology Group — which operates the Truth Social app and was in the process of being acquired by Digital World — said in a statement that it will cooperate with “oversight that supports the SEC’s important mission of protecting retail investors.”

The new probe could make it more difficult for Trump to finance his social media company. The company last year got promises from dozens of investors to pump $1 billion (nearly Rs. 7,800 crore) into the company, but it can’t get the cash until the Digital World acquisition is completed.

Stock in Digital World rocketed to more than $100 (nearly Rs. 7,800) in October after its deal to buy Trump’s company was announced. The stock traded at just around $25 (nearly Rs. 2,000) in morning trading on Monday.

Digital World is a special-purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, part of an investing phenomenon that exploded in popularity over the past two years.

Such “blank-check” companies are empty corporate entities with no operations, only offering investors the promise they will buy a business in the future. As such they are allowed to sell stock to the public quickly without the usual regulatory disclosures and delays, but only if they haven’t already lined up possible acquisition targets.

Digital World said in a regulatory filing on Monday that each member of its board of directors has been subpoenaed by the grand jury in the Southern District of New York. Both the grand jury and the SEC are also seeking a number of documents tied to the company and others including a sponsor, ARC Global Investments, and Miami-based venture capital firm Rocket One Capital.

Some of the sought documents involve “due diligence” regarding Trump Media and other potential acquisition targets, as well as communications with Digital World’s underwriter and financial adviser in its initial public offering, according to the SEC disclosure.

Digital World also Monday announced the resignation of one of its board members, Bruce Garelick, a chief strategy officer at Rocket One.


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Roxe Holdings Said to Go Public in $3.65 Billion Merger Deal With Goldenstone Acquisition

Blockchain-based payments company Roxe Holdings is nearing a deal to go public through a merger with blank check company Goldenstone Acquisition Limited at a combined valuation of $3.65 billion (nearly Rs. 28,500 crore), according to people familiar with the matter.

The deal bucks an unfavorable market environment with cryptocurrencies plunging in value and investors largely losing interest in special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) of this sort partly because of disappointing returns.

None of the Roxe investors plans to sell their stakes, the sources said. Goldenstone raised just $57.5 million (nearly Rs. 440 crore) in its initial public offering in March this year, a slither of the deal’s value. Roxe investors are also entitled to an earnout for additional shares in the combined company if certain stock price targets are met, according to the sources.

A deal could be announced later on Tuesday, the sources said, requesting anonymity ahead of an official announcement.

Founded in 2019, Roxe connects banks, payment firms and remittance companies, facilitating cross-border payments using their private blockchain tokens. It does not use cryptocurrencies, whose market value has been volatile.

Bitcoin fell below $20,000 (nearly Rs. 15 lakh) on June 18 for the first time since December 2020. It has plummeted around 60 percent this year. The overall crypto market has slumped to around $900 billion (nearly Rs. 7,000 crore).

This would be Roxe’s founder Haohan Xu’s second SPAC merger this year after he agreed to take crypto exchange Apifiny public earlier this year in a $530 million (nearly Rs. 4,100 crore) deal.

About 600 SPACs that went public in the past couple of years are still trying to complete deals, according to data from Dealogic. A little over six months into 2022, 26 SPAC mergers have been terminated in the United States, according to data from industry tracker Spac Research. That compares with a total of 18 in the whole of 2021, and seven in 2020.

© Thomson Reuters 2022

 


 

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