Harrison Street CEO: Build your portfolio assuming there will be inflation for the next decade

Christopher Merrill is the co-founder and CEO of Harrison Street and sees the stickiness of price increases first-hand with his firm's focus on demographic-driven real estate, such as student housing and nursing homes.
@LesliePicker

A for-profit prison company is going public via SPAC, raising ESG concerns in blank-check space

The red-hot SPAC market could have an ESG problem.

 

Securus Technologies, a prison services company that makes profit from charging families of the incarcerated for phone calls, is in talks to go public via merging with Atlantic Avenue Acquisition Corp, according a person familiar with the matter.

 

While prison services telecoms are less scrutinized than companies that operate correctional facilities, their for-profit nature and their line of business still typically make ESG-conscious investors shy away. 

(ESG stands for environmental, social and governance.)

 

"In a climate focused on ESG, and given criticisms being hurled at SPACs in general, you can see how this combination could become a controversial deal for investors," said Perrie Weiner, partner at Baker McKenzie LLP.

 

Securus Technologies and Atlantic Avenue Acquisition Corp didn't respond to CNBC's requests for comment. Bloomberg News first reported on the merger discussions.

 

SPACs, which stands for special purpose acquisition companies, are created to raise capital from public markets and then use that cash to merge with a private company and take it public within a two-year timeframe.

 

Investors in SPACs as a rule do not know the identity of the firm that will be targeted for merger. After a blockbuster year, there are currently over 400 SPACs actively looking for a target company, according to data from Wolfe Research.

 

Many wonder if pre-merger SPACs are inherently not ESG-friendly with the lack of clarity on where the money will go in the future. Bernstein analysts have called SPACs "one of the most anti-ESG assets imaginable" as they fail on the governance side of things.

 

In terms of the social aspect, one particular deal recently raised eyebrows on Wall Street.

 

In October when Digital World Acquisition Corp. announced plans to merge with former President Donald Trump's planned social media platform, at least two hedge funds pulled out their investments after learning of the target company.

 

"Many investors are grappling with hard questions about how to incorporate their values into their work. For us, this was not a close call," hedge fund Saba Capital Management founder Boaz Weinstein said then of his DWAC sale.

 

As SPACs continued to face regulatory headwinds, many are pivoting to companies with ESG credentials, targeting either an environmental thesis or social impact theme, such as electric vehicle companies.

 

"That's where investor appetite is right now," Weiner said. "And, that's why you will see many private equity firms cut loose companies that fly in the face of ESG, and they will look to SPACs as a quick way to divest themselves of those sorts of negatively perceived investments."

Delivering Alpha Headlines

Big thoughts from the big money

Bill Ackman says omicron could end up being bullish for markets

Investor Bill Ackman said the new omicron variant of the coronavirus could actually give U.S. stocks a boost if symptoms turn out to be less severe. "While it is too early to have definitive data, early reported data suggest that the Omicron virus causes 'mild to moderate' symptoms (less severity) and is more transmissible," Ackman said in a tweet. "If this turns out to be true, this is bullish not bearish for markets." Ackman's comments have been widely watched throughout the health crisis and the market's turbulent ride over the past two years. In March 2020, Ackman warned investors that "hell is coming" and urged President Donald Trump to shut down the country for 30 days.

Ray Dalio says cash is not a safe place right now despite heightened market volatility

Bridgewater Associates' Ray Dalio stood by his belief that cash is not the place to be despite the volatility in the markets triggered by the new Covid omicron variant. "Cash is not a safe investment, is not a safe place because it will be taxed by inflation," the founder of the world's biggest hedge fund told CNBC. During turbulent times, it's also important to be in a safe, well-balanced portfolio, the billionaire investor said.

"You can reduce your risk without reducing your returns. You will not market-time this," Dalio said.

Jeff Vinik remains optimistic amid omicron and picks stocks in cloud services sector

Investor Jeff Vinik said he remains hopeful that the U.S. economy and the stock market will ride out the disruptions from the new omicron Covid strain. "We've learned to adjust. I don't see a significant economic hit," the owner of the Tampa Bay Lightning told CNBC. Vinik said he sees a period of modest inflation that's manageable. The veteran stock picker revealed that he's betting on the digital cloud economy, and he likes stocks in the services and consulting industries.

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