Welcome to our dedicated page for SPARTACUS ACQUISITION II SEC filings (Ticker: TMTS), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Spartacus Acquisition Corporation is a blank check company formed for the purpose of effecting a merger, capital stock exchange, asset acquisition, stock purchase, reorganization or similar business combination with one or more businesses. While the Company may pursue an initial business combination target in any stage of its corporate evolution or in any business industry or sector, it intends to focus its search on telecommunications, media and technology ('TMT') companies.Spartacus Acquisition Corp. II is allowing investors to trade its Class A ordinary shares and warrants separately from the units sold in its initial public offering, starting April 2, 2026. Each unit currently consists of one Class A share and one-third of a redeemable warrant.
Each whole warrant entitles the holder to buy one Class A ordinary share at $11.50 per share, and only whole warrants will trade after separation. Units will continue to trade under the symbol TMTSU, while separated Class A shares and warrants are expected to trade on Nasdaq as TMTS and TMTSW, respectively.
Spartacus Acquisition Corp. files its annual report describing a newly formed Cayman Islands SPAC focused on completing a business combination in any industry. The company completed an IPO of 23,000,000 units at $10.00 each, placing $230,000,000 in a Nasdaq-qualifying trust account.
The SPAC has until February 12, 2028 to close a business combination or redeem public shares for cash held in the trust. Sponsor founder shares bought at a nominal price and 4,125,000 private placement warrants create potential dilution, amplified by anti-dilution protections on Class B shares.
The report explains redemption mechanics, limits on large redemptions, possible extensions of the combination period, and options to use equity, debt or additional financings. It highlights conflicts of interest, competition for deals, and geopolitical and market risks that could affect the search for a target and post-merger share performance.