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SC II Acquisition Corp.
SC II Acquisition Corp. is a blank-check SPAC formed to merge with a private company, deploying IPO capital into a single time-bound transaction.
SC II Acquisition Corp.
SC II Acquisition Corp. operates as a special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC), a publicly traded shell corporation that raises capital through an initial public offering to acquire an existing private company. The identity of its sponsor, the individuals or entity that formed and manages the vehicle, is central to its investment thesis but remains unconfirmed in the public domain for this specific entity. The vehicle's structure implies a concentrated bet: it will hold the proceeds of its IPO in a trust account while the management team searches for a target, typically within an 18-to-24-month deadline. A SPAC's strategy is defined entirely by the sector focus and deal-sourcing capability of its sponsor. Without a disclosed sponsor or stated industry mandate, the deployment plan for SC II Acquisition Corp. is opaque. The capital is intended for a single transaction with a private company, which then assumes the SPAC's public listing. This process, known as a de-SPAC transaction, has historically been used across technology, healthcare, and energy transition sectors, though no target or letter of intent is on file for this entity (per public record). The geographic footprint typically skews toward US-based targets listed on the Nasdaq or NYSE. The vehicle's launch context matters: it appeared during or after the SPAC boom that peaked in 2020-2021, a period marked by high-profile deals like DraftKings and Virgin Galactic, followed by rising redemption rates and increased SEC scrutiny. Many SPACs formed in this era have liquidated without completing a deal. The 'SC II' designation suggests a series, likely following an 'SC I,' implying a sponsor group that has completed at least one prior blank-check formation. The structural differentiator for any SPAC is its binary outcome: either it finds and closes an acquisition within its permitted timeframe, creating a new public company, or it liquidates and returns the trust capital to shareholders. This creates a unique risk-reward profile distinct from traditional private equity or venture capital. The absence of a permanent capital base means the entity's existence is inherently time-bound, making the sponsor's track record and the timeline's remaining runway the critical variables for any potential co-investor or IPO participant.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
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AUM
Undisclosed
Location
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Corporate office
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Frequently asked questions
Who is the sponsor behind SC II Acquisition Corp.?
The sponsor group — the entity that formed the SPAC, made the at-risk capital commitment, and leads the search for a target — has not been publicly identified or confirmed for SC II Acquisition Corp. The sponsor's identity and track record are the most critical data points for evaluating a blank-check company, as they determine sector focus, deal flow, and operational expertise post-merger. Without this information, the entity remains an opaque shell.
What is the deadline for SC II Acquisition Corp. to complete a deal?
A SPAC typically has 18 to 24 months from its IPO date to announce and close a business combination, though the exact deadline is specified in its charter. Failure to complete a deal by that deadline triggers a mandatory liquidation, returning the trust value (generally $10 per share plus any accrued interest) to public shareholders. The specific deadline for SC II Acquisition Corp. depends on its IPO date, which is not confirmed in the public record.
What happens to my investment if SC II Acquisition Corp. does not find a target?
If the SPAC fails to complete a business combination within its designated timeframe, it is required to liquidate. The funds held in the trust account, which represent the bulk of the IPO proceeds, are returned to public shareholders on a pro-rata basis. The sponsor's founder shares, typically purchased for a nominal amount, become worthless in a liquidation scenario.
What sector or geography is SC II Acquisition Corp. targeting?
No specific investment mandate, sector focus, or geographic restriction has been disclosed for SC II Acquisition Corp. in its public filings. Many SPACs define a broad thematic focus (e.g., fintech, sustainability) in their prospectus, but absent such disclosure, the vehicle has full discretion to pursue targets across any industry and region, subject only to the sponsor's expertise and market conditions.
What is the difference between SC II Acquisition Corp. and SC I?
The 'II' designation strongly implies the existence of a predecessor vehicle, likely an 'SC I Acquisition Corp.' In a typical SPAC series, the same sponsor group sequentially launches new vehicles, often after completing or announcing a deal with the prior one. The performance of SC I — including whether it completed a merger and how the resulting company trades — would be a key indicator of the sponsor's capability and the potential execution risk for SC II.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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