Company Description
Eureka Acquisition Corp (NASDAQ: EURK) is a blank check company, also commonly referred to as a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC), incorporated as a Cayman Islands exempted company. According to its public disclosures, Eureka Acquisition Corp was formed for the purpose of effecting a merger, share exchange, asset acquisition, stock purchase, reorganization or similar business combination with one or more businesses.
The company’s securities are listed on The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC. Its units, each consisting of one Class A ordinary share and one right to acquire one-fifth of one Class A ordinary share, trade under the symbol EURKU. The Class A ordinary shares trade under the symbol EURK, and the rights trade under the symbol EURKR, as described in the company’s SEC filings and offering documents.
Business purpose as a SPAC
Eureka Acquisition Corp’s stated objective, as set out in its press releases and SEC filings, is to complete an initial business combination within a defined timeframe. As a SPAC, it raised capital in an initial public offering of units, with the proceeds placed into a trust account. The company’s public communications describe its focus on identifying and combining with one or more operating businesses through structures such as mergers, share exchanges, asset acquisitions, share purchases or reorganizations.
The company’s charter and subsequent disclosures explain that it has the ability to extend the deadline to complete a business combination by making specified monthly deposits into its trust account. These extensions are documented in Current Reports on Form 8-K, which describe the deposit of a monthly extension fee into the trust account and the issuance of unsecured promissory notes to the company’s sponsor in connection with those deposits.
Capital structure and listed securities
Based on its SEC filings, Eureka Acquisition Corp has Class A ordinary shares and rights registered under Section 12(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Each right entitles the holder to receive one-fifth of one Class A ordinary share upon consummation of an initial business combination, as described in the company’s prospectus and subsequent reports. The units, Class A ordinary shares and rights are all listed on Nasdaq, and the company is identified as an emerging growth company under applicable SEC rules.
The company’s filings also describe the existence of Class B ordinary shares (SPAC Class B Shares), which are separate from the Class A ordinary shares. In connection with a business combination, these Class B shares may be converted into Class A shares under the terms set out in the relevant agreements and filings.
Trust account and extension arrangements
In multiple Form 8-K filings, Eureka Acquisition Corp reports that it may extend the period of time to consummate its initial business combination up to a specified outside date, with each extension requiring the deposit of a defined monthly extension fee into the company’s trust account. The filings state that these monthly extension fees are paid by Hercules Capital Management Corp, the company’s sponsor, and that the company issues unsecured promissory notes to the sponsor in the principal amount of each fee.
These promissory notes bear no interest and are payable upon the earlier of the consummation of the company’s business combination or the expiry of the company’s term. The notes may be convertible, at the sponsor’s option, into private units of the company, each consisting of one Class A ordinary share and one right to receive one-fifth of one Class A ordinary share, at a conversion price referenced to the unit offering price, as described in the company’s Form 8-K disclosures.
Proposed business combination with Marine Thinking Inc.
In a press release and a related Form 8-K, Eureka Acquisition Corp announced that it entered into a business combination agreement with Marine Thinking Inc., a company incorporated under the Canada Business Corporations Act, and a wholly owned subsidiary of Eureka formed for the amalgamation. The agreement contemplates a series of transactions referred to as the business combination or the transactions.
According to these disclosures, the structure includes a continuance of Eureka Acquisition Corp from a Cayman Islands exempted company to a company under the Canada Business Corporations Act, with its name to be changed from “Eureka Acquisition Corp” to “Marine Thinking Holdings Inc.” or another agreed name upon completion of the continuance. Following that continuance, Marine Thinking Inc. and the amalgamation subsidiary are expected to amalgamate under Canadian law, with the resulting entity becoming a direct wholly owned subsidiary of the post-continuance company.
The business combination agreement describes how company shares and options of Marine Thinking Inc. would be exchanged for Class A shares and options of Eureka Acquisition Corp (or its post-continuance successor), using an amalgamation multiple and total share consideration defined in the agreement. It also outlines how the SPAC’s units, rights and Class A and Class B shares would be treated at closing, including the conversion of rights into fractions of Class A shares and the conversion of Class B shares into Class A shares, subject to redemptions and other terms.
The proposed transaction is subject to conditions, including effectiveness of a registration statement containing a proxy statement/prospectus, necessary shareholder approvals, regulatory approvals, and listing approval for the combined company’s shares on Nasdaq or an alternative exchange, as detailed in the company’s filings.
Corporate status and regulatory profile
Eureka Acquisition Corp is incorporated in the Cayman Islands, as stated in its SEC reports, and has its securities registered with the SEC under a Commission File Number referenced in its Form 8-K filings. The company identifies itself as an emerging growth company and files periodic and current reports with the SEC, including Forms 10-K, 8-K and registration statements, in connection with its initial public offering and subsequent corporate actions.
The company’s public communications emphasize that its purpose is to complete a business combination within the timeframe allowed by its charter and any approved extensions. If it does not complete a business combination within that timeframe and does not satisfy the conditions for further extensions, its charter and related disclosures describe that it would cease operations except for winding up, and liquidate and dissolve, with the trust account funds distributed in accordance with its governing documents.
SPAC governance and shareholder actions
Press releases from Eureka Acquisition Corp describe extraordinary general meetings in lieu of annual general meetings of shareholders, convened to consider proposals such as amendments to the company’s charter to extend the deadline for completing a business combination. These communications explain record dates for determining shareholders entitled to vote, deadlines for submitting or withdrawing redemption requests, and the ability of shareholders to redeem their public shares in connection with such meetings.
The company also discloses the use of a proxy solicitor and a transfer agent in connection with these meetings and redemption processes. Details about the timing of meetings, postponements to allow additional engagement with shareholders, and revised terms for contributions to the trust account are provided in its public announcements.
Position within the financial services sector
Within the financial services sector, Eureka Acquisition Corp is classified in the industry category of shell companies, reflecting its nature as a SPAC with no operating business prior to completing a business combination. Its activities, as described in its filings and press releases, center on capital raising through an initial public offering, maintaining a trust account for the benefit of public shareholders, seeking and negotiating a business combination agreement, and managing shareholder approvals and regulatory processes associated with that combination.
Investors and analysts interested in EURK typically review its SEC filings, including Forms S-1, 10-K and 8-K, as well as its press releases, to understand the terms of its initial public offering, the status of its trust account and extensions, and the detailed terms and conditions of its proposed business combination with Marine Thinking Inc.