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Cantor Fitzgerald pays $6.75 million to settle SEC charges over misleading SPAC disclosures

Wall Street brokerage Cantor Fitzgerald has consented to pay a $6.75 million penalty to settle Securities and Exchange Commission charges that it misled financiers in blankcheck business it controlled, the regulator stated on Thursday.

Cantor Fitzgerald did not instantly react to a request for comment. According to the SEC, Cantor neither confessed nor denied the SEC's findings.

Blank-check companies, or special purpose acquisition business ( SPACs) are shell business that raise funds through a listing with the objective of obtaining a personal company and taking it public, circumventing the going public process.

According to the SEC, in 2020 and 2021 a team of Cantor Fitzgerald executives handled and managed two SPACs that raised $750 million from investors through IPOs ahead of the SPACs' ultimate mergers with View and Satellogic.

In their SEC filings, the SPACs said they had not had substantive conversations with potential takeover targets prior to their IPOs, even though Cantor, acting on behalf of the SPACs, had currently begun negotiations with View and Satellogic, the SEC said.

This enforcement action reflects the straightforward proposal that any disclosures about substantive conversations with prospective targets must be materially precise, Sanjay Wadhwa, acting director of the SEC's Department of Enforcement, stated in a statement.

(source: Reuters)