Finance veteran Truell to restart European SPAC market with Amsterdam listing

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Updated 05 October 2021
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Finance veteran Truell to restart European SPAC market with Amsterdam listing

  • The market for SPACs has diminished dramatically in recent months due to regulatory scrutiny and increased investor scepticism
  • SPACs, also called blank cheque vehicles, are listed on a stock market backed by an entrepreneur or businessperson with a view to acquiring a private company in the future

British finance veteran Edi Truell is planning to list a blank cheque vehicle in Amsterdam in what would be the first special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) to surface in Europe since the summer.


Disruptive Capital Acquisition Company would look to raise up to 125 million pounds ($170 million) from its listing and would target a financial services company in Western or Northern Europe, according to a message to investors seen by Reuters.


Truell is a director of private equity firm Disruptive Capital and also the co-founder of The Pension SuperFund, which was set up to take on the risk of beleaguered UK company pension schemes.


The market for SPACs has diminished dramatically in recent months due to regulatory scrutiny and increased investor scepticism around a racy structure that allows companies a backdoor entry to a stock market listing.


SPACs, also called blank cheque vehicles, are listed on a stock market backed by an entrepreneur or businessperson with a view to acquiring a private company in the future.


Truell, who was also previously CEO of Pension Insurance Corporation, said the SPAC was targeting financial services in "asset-heavy, legacy businesses", such as insurance or reinsurance, which could be scaled up with the help of new technology.


"We want boring businesses that we know and love."


The team behind the SPAC also includes Kari Stadigh, vice chair of Nokia and former group CEO of Finnish insurer Sampo.


In Europe, Amsterdam has been the listing venue of choice for such blank check vehicles, with French billionaire Bernard Arnault and British oil veteran Tony Hayward both choosing the Dutch bourse for their SPACs.


Truell said the listing environment for SPACs was more attractive in Amsterdam than London when he was putting the vehicle together.


British authorities have tried to make London a more attractive venue for SPACs by bringing its rules more in line with New York, which has seen an unprecedented boom of SPAC listings in 2020 and 2021. But so far there have been no SPAC listings in London this year. 


19k ‘Made in Saudi Arabia’ products now reaching 180 global markets: industry minister

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19k ‘Made in Saudi Arabia’ products now reaching 180 global markets: industry minister

RIYADH: Products carrying the “Made in Saudi” logo have reached 19,000 and are shipped to 180 countries, according to the minister of industry and mineral resources.

In his opening speech at the third edition of the “Made in Saudi” exhibition, Bandar Alkhorayef indicated that the program now includes 3,700 registered national companies.

He noted that the first half of 2025 recorded the highest semi-annual figure for non-oil exports, valued at SR307 billion ($81.8 billion), after total exports in 2024 reached approximately SR515 billion.

The “Made in Saudi” program was launched in 2021 with the aim of strengthening the presence of local products in domestic and international markets and contributing to the growth of the national economy in line with Vision 2030 targets.

The minister highlighted the efforts of the Saudi Exports Development Authority in facilitating the access of national products to global markets.

This has been achieved through the signing of 108 export agreements, the registration of 433 importers on the Saudi Exports platform, and the licensing of nine export houses whose outbound trade has reached 21 countries with a value of SR390 million.

The “Made in Saudi” program is an initiative of the National Industrial Development and Logistics Program. It is managed by the Saudi Export Development Authority, also known as Saudi Exports, a governmental body tasked with increasing the Kingdom’s non-oil exports. 

Saudi Exports developed and is managing the program with the strategic intent of supporting the nation in achieving the objectives of its transformative Vision 2030.