New York, June 2, 2026, 05:08 (EDT)
Collective Acquisition Corp. II units were sitting just below their $10 IPO price before Tuesday’s regular Nasdaq session, a small discount that leaves the newly listed blank-check company trading more like cash than a bet on a named business.
The Nasdaq-listed units, ticker CAIIU, last showed $9.975 at 4:30 p.m. EDT on Monday, according to StockLight. Nasdaq regular trading runs from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern, with premarket trading beginning at 4 a.m., a window that often has thinner liquidity and wider price moves.
This is why it matters now. Collective is in the target-search stage at a time when SPAC investors have fresh deal signals across the market: Boardroom Alpha said no SPAC IPOs priced on June 1, while Spacsphere Acquisition Corp. announced a merger with Mobilewalla and Rising Dragon Acquisition Corp. won an extension to Oct. 15, 2027 after 1,903,823 shares were redeemed.
Collective raised $220 million in its April IPO, selling 22 million units at $10 each. Each unit has one Class A ordinary share and one-half of one redeemable warrant, a right to buy a share later at a set price; the filing said $221.1 million, or $10.05 per unit, was placed in a U.S.-based trust account, the cash pool backing public-share redemptions.
The company is a SPAC, short for special purpose acquisition company: a listed cash shell that raises money first and then seeks a merger target. Collective said it may look anywhere, but initially aims at businesses tied to U.S. or allied national interests, including finance, strategic resources, defense technology and artificial intelligence; its management is led by CEO Daniel Hoffman and Samuel Sayegh, chairman, president and CFO.
That AI angle is now a crowded lane. Reuters reported Monday that Anthropic confidentially filed for a U.S. IPO, adding to a market already watching SpaceX and OpenAI; “Filing shortly after SpaceX allows Anthropic to capitalize on strong investor interest in AI and growth stocks while the window remains favorable,” said Kat Liu, vice president at IPO research firm IPOX. D.A. Davidson’s Gil Luria said the combined demand for capital from SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic was likely to create market disruptions, giving an edge to companies that move early. Reuters
Other market voices were more blunt about demand. Matt Kennedy, senior strategist at Renaissance Capital, said there was “insatiable demand” for elite AI developers among public investors, while Wedbush’s Dan Ives called the rush by SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI an “opening of the floodgates” for the IPO market. Reuters
For Collective, that backdrop cuts both ways. A hot IPO and AI market could help a defense-tech or AI-linked target get attention, but it also means a small SPAC has to compete for targets, investor time and headlines against much larger issuers.
But risk remains high. The prospectus said Collective had not selected a target or begun substantive discussions, and warned public shareholders could face dilution from founder shares and warrants; if no deal is completed within 18 months of the offering close, public shares are to be redeemed from the trust account.
For now, CAIIU’s small discount to both the IPO price and the trust amount is the story. Until Collective names a target, the units are likely to trade less on earnings or peer multiples and more on trust cash, sponsor credibility and the broader appetite for SPAC deals.