LOKV Holds at $10.53 as Teamshares Deal Deadline Nears

LOKV Holds at $10.53 as Teamshares Deal Deadline Nears

May 22, 2026

New York, May 22, 2026, 14:11 EDT

Live Oak Acquisition Corp. V traded near $10.53 Friday, holding close to its cash value as investors looked for any update on the Teamshares merger. Volume came in light at about 1,000 shares, much less than the usual 120,000. Shares stayed under their 52-week peak of $11.67.

Why it matters now: The Teamshares deal is still front and center for Live Oak, pushing its own numbers into the background. Live Oak and Teamshares have pushed the merger’s outside date out to July 15 from May 31, saying the extension is to finish closing conditions.

Teamshares and Live Oak are pushing ahead on the proxy process. A filing to the SEC showed both companies submitted an amended Form S-4/A, a registration statement for business combinations, on May 19.

Live Oak is a SPAC, or special purpose acquisition company — a public shell that raises cash to merge with a private firm and list it. For SPACs like Live Oak, trust balances and shareholder redemptions, where investors can pull money out instead of sticking with the deal, usually matter more than earnings reports before any merger closes.

Live Oak said in its last quarterly filing it had 23 million Class A ordinary shares that could be redeemed at $10.48 each as of March 31, with about $241.1 million held in its trust account. Friday’s price was still just above that redemption figure.

The companies changed the merger agreement on May 13 to spell out how some Teamshares preferred shareholders can elect liquidation preference. That means certain preferred holders now have a set option to get priority payouts instead of converting the way the agreement said before.

The deal puts a $746 million pro forma enterprise value on the combined company with a $126 million PIPE, led by accounts advised by T. Rowe Price Investment Management. Live Oak chairman and CEO Richard Hendrix said Teamshares would see “a lowered cost and more ready access to capital.” Teamshares CEO Michael Brown said the platform “helps owners retire, businesses grow, and employees earn stock.” Business Wire

Brown told Reuters after the deal was announced that joining forces lets Teamshares “keep reinvesting in more acquisitions and to continually develop our tech platform.” Reuters said the company buys small and medium-sized businesses and has subsidiaries that made over $400 million in revenue, spanning 40 industries in 30 states. Reuters

SPAC activity is picking up. Renaissance Capital’s IPO calendar shows BurTech Acquisition II, FortuneX Acquisition, and Peace Acquisition all in this week’s blank-check mix. That puts LOKV up against more names as it tries to attract investors in a still-cautious, but busier, market.

Trading could stay slow with Memorial Day coming up. Nasdaq’s 2026 holiday schedule says markets close Monday, May 25, so Friday will be right ahead of a long U.S. weekend.

The risks are still clear. The merger might not close if it misses on approvals, listing rules, funding, redemptions, or other closing steps. Live Oak has also flagged that raising extra capital could get tougher or pricier, and high redemptions could still hit the deal.

For holders, the focus is shifting from Friday’s price to the proxy statement’s effectiveness, shareholder redemptions, and if Teamshares ends up public with enough money for post-closing acquisitions.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

Stock Market Today

  • Wise Group, Computacenter on Watchlist as Founder-Led Stocks Stand Out in Choppy Market
    July 13, 2026, 4:01 PM EDT. Founder-led names like Wise Group (LSE:WISE) and Computacenter (LSE:CCC) are front and center with markets chopping around on government bond yields, oil prices, and inflation. Wise, a London fintech, sports a £9.8 billion market cap, solid revenue growth, and high returns on equity around the world. Computacenter's £4.7 billion valuation comes with global reach and consistent revenue, but profit margins are slim at 1.7%, and earnings are forecast to rise 12.1%. Computacenter also sits on a high P/E ratio. Investors are sizing up founder incentives against those thin margins. Both stocks put focus on the founder-led growth trade, under pressure from market headwinds on fees and earnings.