Space company Momentus, after settling SEC charges, gets SPAC approved and will go public

Investing

An artist’s rendering of a Momentus Vigoride transfer vehicle deploying a satellite in orbit.
Momentus

Space company Momentus will later this week go public on the Nasdaq, a month after settling Securities and Exchange Commission charges that it misled investors.

Stable Road Acquisition Corp, a special purpose acquisition company or SPAC, on Wednesday announced its merger with Momentus was approved by shareholders. While only a little over half of Stable Road’s shareholders voted for the merger, 97% voted for the deal to go through.

Shares of Stable Road will convert to stock in Momentus on Friday, with the ticker symbol of the company changing from “SRAC” to “MNTS.”

Stable Road’s stock fell 3% in trading on Wednesday from its previous close of $10.47 a share. Stable Road noted that public stockholders filed to redeem about 20% of the firm’s outstanding shares – an unusually high amount for a company that is going public, as redemptions are typically in the low single-digit percentages or less after a SPAC merger closes.

A SPAC raises money from investors through an initial public offering and then uses the cash to acquire a private company and take it public.

Stable Road’s stock is down nearly 43% so far this year, embattled by Momentus’ delayed missions and the pressured departure of Momentus’ founder and former CEO Mikhail Kokorich. The company also had its valuation cut in half from $1.1 billion to $567 million. Finally, Stable Road also faced SEC charges that it falsified the results from a prototype spacecraft test in July 2019.

Stable Road and Momentus agreed to settle the charges and penalties of over $8 million in total. Former CEO Kokorich, who reportedly left the country, has not settled with the SEC.

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