GCM Grosvenor Merges with SPAC to Go Public 

Interest in the so-called ‘blank check’ companies has surged during the pandemic from investors seeking easier ways to fund IPOs. 


GCM Grosvenor will go public after merging with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) sponsored by Cantor Fitzgerald. 

The alternative asset manager will close a $2 billion transaction with the Cantor Fitzgerald-affiliated SPAC called CF Finance Acquisition, the firm said Monday. The combined company will be listed on the NASDAQ stock exchange. 

“We believe that becoming a publicly listed company will benefit our clients, our team members, and all of our stakeholders,” said Michael J. Sacks, chairman and chief executive at GCM Grosvenor, who will continue to lead the alternative asset manager. 

“We have long valued having external shareholders and we wanted to preserve the accountability and focus that comes with that,” he added. 

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GCM Grosvenor will hold a 70% stake in the company. Cantor Fitzgerald, stakeholders of its SPAC, and other institutional investors will own the remaining shares. A minority investor, Hellman & Friedman, will also sell its equity interest in the company after the transaction. 

Investors generally do not know what companies they are funding when they invest in SPACs, which private firms use to acquire another company through an initial public offering (IPO). But the so-called “blank check companies” are enjoying a surge of interest during the pandemic from investors seeking easier, less risky ways to take firms public. 

Midway through the year, 57 SPACs have already gone public, compared with 59 companies for all of 2019, according to data from SPACInsider. What’s more, gross proceeds from sales have already topped $22.5 billion, versus the $13.6 billion in sales last year. 

Last month, Bill Ackman’s hedge fund, Pershing Square Capital Management, raised $4 billion in the largest SPAC offering ever. 

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Princeton Settles Lawsuit over ‘Excessive’ Retirement Plan Fees

University agrees to pay $5.8 million and not raise plan fees for three years.


Princeton University has settled a class action securities lawsuit that alleged its trustees breached their fiduciary duties by allowing two of its 403(b) retirement plans to pay “unreasonable and excessive fees.”

Under the terms of the settlement, Princeton will pay $5.8 million and has agreed not to increase the recordkeeping fees for its Princeton University Retirement Plan and Princeton University Savings Plan for three years.

Princeton also agreed to conduct a request for proposals (RFP) process for recordkeeping-administrative services and outside independent investment consulting services within three years of the approval of the settlement. The settlement also calls for “commercially reasonable best efforts to continue to attempt to reduce recordkeeping fees.”

Additionally, Princeton agreed to have its benefits committee and investment committee amend their respective charter and/or operating documents to “adopt and follow best practices for 403(b) plans as described by the plans’ current independent investment consultant.”

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The university also agreed that, for the five years following the approval of the settlement, its investment committee will not meet fewer than four times per year with the plans’ current independent investment consultant, or another independent investment consultant if a new one is selected after an RFP. In those meetings, they will evaluate the expense and performance of each investment option in the plans, review and consider changes to the investment option lineup, review administrative and recordkeeping costs of the plans, and investigate and pursue additional strategies to lower the plans’ costs.

The Princeton retirement plans offer various investments managed by TIAA-CREF, including annuities and investment funds. The plans also offer more than 40 investment choices managed by The Vanguard Group and/or Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company, which are all mutual funds.

The lawsuit alleged that Princeton’s trustees breached their fiduciary duties under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) by causing the plans to “incur higher administrative fees and expenses than reasonable and necessary.”

As an example, it cited Princeton’s selection of TIAA-CREF’s TIAA Traditional Annuity as the plans’ principal capital preservation fund. It is a fixed annuity contract that returns a contractually specified minimum interest rate.

However, according to the complaint, the annuity has “severe restrictions and penalties for withdrawal if participants wish to change their investments in the plans.” It said the participants who want to withdraw their investment can only do so every 10 years without penalty.

“One could reasonably infer from these circumstances alone that the defendant’s fiduciary decisionmaking process was either flawed or badly executed,” said the complaint, “but there is substantial additional evidence of a flawed process, such as incorrect reporting on the participant fee disclosure prepared by TIAA of expense ratios for the available Vanguard funds, making many of those funds appear more expensive than they really were.”

 

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