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Blank Check Offering

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Blank check offering
An initial public offering by a company whose business activities are undefined and therefore peculative.

Blank Check Offering
An initial public offering made by a company that has not yet defined its business operations. Black check offerings are usually penny stocks; the funds raised through a blank check offering must usually be placed in an escrow account until certain conditions have been met. Because a blank check company has not begun, or even defined, its operations, it effectively asks investors to trust it. Blank check offerings are therefore subject to extra regulation to protect these investors from the possibility that the company is a fraud. In any event, investing in a blank check offering is always speculative. See also: Rule 419.


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Argenziano also has extensive experience in blank check offerings and M&A advisory.
About DealFlow Media: DealFlow Media publishes The Reverse Merger Report, a quarterly newsletter which tracks the market for alternative public offerings, including reverse mergers, blank check offerings, self-filings and shell companies.
 
 
 
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