Metals Acquisition Corp. II 8-K
Research Summary
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Metals Acquisition Corp. II Completes $230M IPO; Private Warrants Sold
What Happened
- Metals Acquisition Corp. II announced it closed its initial public offering on March 13, 2026, selling 23,000,000 units at $10.00 per unit for gross proceeds of $230,000,000. Each unit consists of one Class A ordinary share and one‑third of a redeemable warrant; each whole warrant entitles the holder to buy one Class A share at $11.50 (subject to adjustment) beginning 30 days after the company’s initial business combination.
- In connection with the IPO the company entered into customary agreements including an underwriting agreement with Cohen & Company Capital Markets (the representative), a warrant agreement and an investment management trust agreement with Continental (trustee/warrant agent), registration rights and other related agreements. A portion of the IPO proceeds (including up to $9.2M of deferred underwriter commission) were deposited into a U.S.-based trust account maintained by Continental.
Key Details
- IPO closed March 13, 2026: 23,000,000 units at $10.00 = $230,000,000 gross proceeds.
- Private placement: 5,066,666 private placement warrants sold at $1.50 each, raising $7,600,000; purchasers: Sponsor (3,533,333), Representative (1,226,666), Jett (230,000) and Sternship (76,667).
- Trust account: $230,000,000 placed in trust; funds generally locked until completion of an initial business combination, shareholder redemptions, or other specified events; limited interest exceptions for taxes and up to $100,000 of liquidation expenses.
- Governance and charter: Company adopted Amended and Restated Memorandum and Articles of Association and appointed Patrice Ellen Merrin, Anne Templeman-Jones and Jay Charles Kellerman to key board committee roles (March 11, 2026).
Why It Matters
- The company is now publicly listed with $230M held in trust to pursue an initial business combination, which establishes the financial base for future acquisition activity typical of a SPAC.
- The private placement warrants and public warrants can affect dilution and future economics for shareholders once exercised or exchanged in a business combination.
- The new governance structure (amended articles and committee appointments) and the executed agreements set the legal and operational framework for the company’s next steps toward completing an initial business combination.