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If You Invested in AA Mission Acquisition Corp. (AAM)

Blank Checks · Shell Companies · NYSE
Looking for the live price? See the AAM quote & overview
$1,000 invested 1 Year Ago
$1,021
+2.1% total 3.7% CAGR
Bought on Jul 7, 2025 at $10.44
$1,000 invested 5 Years Ago
$1
-99.9% total -77.9% CAGR
Bought on Jul 6, 2021 at $10,700.00

What $1,000 or $10,000 in AAM Would Be Worth Today

Real historical value by amount invested and how long ago
If you invested 1 year ago 5 years ago 10 years ago Since Jul 7, 2015
$1,000 $1,021 +2% $1 -100% $1 -100% $1 -100%
$10,000 $10,212 +2% $10 -100% $13 -100% $10 -100%

Based on real historical closing prices through the latest market close. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

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$1,000 Investment Over Time

AAM vs S&P 500

Year-by-Year Returns

AAM annual performance
Year Start Price End Price Annual Return Cumulative
2017 $7807.69 $7961.54 +2.0% +2.0%
2018 $7961.54 $10307.70 +29.5% +32.0%
2019 $10230.80 $12800.00 +25.1% +63.9%
2020 $11950.00 $11200.00 -6.3% +43.4%
2021 $11800.00 $12600.00 +6.8% +61.4%
2022 $0.00 $0.00 NaN% -100.0%
2023 $0.00 $0.00 NaN% -100.0%
2024 $0.00 $10.10 +Infinity% -99.9%
2025 $10.11 $10.67 +5.5% -99.9%
2026 $10.64 $10.66 +0.2% -99.9%

About AA Mission Acquisition Corp.

Blank Checks · NYSE

AA Mission Acquisition Corp. is a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, organized as a Cayman Islands exempted company and associated with the ticker symbol AAM. The company was structured as a blank-check issuer whose securities included Class A ordinary shares, units and warrants. Its public-company disclosures center on the mechanics typical of a SPAC, including a trust account, public-share redemption rights, shareholder voting matters, warrant terms, governance provisions and corporate-status filings.

The company’s security structure included units, each consisting of one Class A ordinary share and one-half of one warrant; Class A ordinary shares; and warrants, with each whole warrant entitling the holder to purchase one Class A ordinary share at a fixed exercise price. The securities were registered on the New York Stock Exchange before subsequent exchange and registration-status filings documented removal from listing and termination or suspension of Exchange Act reporting obligations.

As a SPAC, AA Mission Acquisition Corp. did not operate a conventional product or service business. Its issuer structure was built around capital held in a trust account and a defined period to pursue an initial business combination. Public shareholders had redemption rights tied to the trust account, while warrant holders did not have redemption rights with respect to the warrants. The company’s disclosures also identified it as an emerging growth company for public-reporting purposes.

AA Mission Acquisition Corp.’s governance record includes an extraordinary general meeting at which shareholders voted on proposals related to the company’s governing documents and trust agreement. Those proposals did not receive the required approval, and the company announced the redemption of public shares in connection with the meeting. Later regulatory records include a Form 25 notification for removal from listing and registration on the New York Stock Exchange and a Form 15 certification covering termination of registration or suspension of the duty to file reports for its units, Class A ordinary shares and warrants.

The company’s principal executive office was identified in The Woodlands, Texas. Its public-company profile is therefore best understood as a SPAC issuer with a defined security structure, trust-account redemption mechanics and completed exchange-registration and Exchange Act reporting-status records rather than as an operating company with recurring commercial revenue.

Market Cap
$0.2B
Current Price
$10.66
View full AAM overview

Frequently Asked Questions

AA Mission Acquisition Corp. investment returns

How much would $1,000 invested in AA Mission Acquisition Corp. be worth today?

If you invested $1,000 in AA Mission Acquisition Corp. (AAM) 10 years ago on 2016-07-06, your investment would be worth $1 today, representing a -99.9% total return, growing at a compounded rate of -50.2% per year (CAGR).

Has AA Mission Acquisition Corp. outperformed the S&P 500?

Over the past 10 years, AAM returned -99.9% compared to +255.2% for the S&P 500, underperforming the benchmark by 355.1 percentage points.

What is AA Mission Acquisition Corp.'s average annual return?

The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of AAM over the past 10 years is -50.2%, growing at a compounded rate each year. Individual years vary significantly — AAM's best recent year was 2024 (+Infinity%) and worst was 2026 (+0.2%).

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