NEW YORK, June 2, 2026, 13:06 (EDT)
Vendome Acquisition Corporation I (VNME) stock was flat at $10.19 early Tuesday afternoon. Shares hovered near the usual cash trust price for SPACs waiting to announce a deal. As of 1:04 p.m. EDT, VNME was unchanged on the Nasdaq, according to .
That’s important now since Vendome is still a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC—a listed shell company that raises cash first, then looks for a merger. For stocks like these, short-term focus stays on the trust account, redemption price, and the time the sponsor has left to make a deal, rather than sales or margins.
SPACs saw action around it. Boardroom Alpha reported that no SPAC IPOs priced on June 2, but counted 98 SPAC IPOs so far this year, raising $17.15 billion. June 1-2 deals included the Spacsphere Acquisition Corp merger with Mobilewalla, a forward purchase agreement from Live Oak Acquisition Corp V, and a deadline extension for International Media Acquisition Corp.
Vendome collected $200 million in its July 2025 IPO, selling 20 million units at $10 apiece. Each unit had a Class A ordinary share plus half a redeemable warrant, the company said. Vendome said it would look for consumer-sector deals in North America, Southeast Asia and Europe.
Vendome’s first-quarter filing shows the SPAC with $205.6 million in its trust at March 31, or $10.28 per redeemable Class A share. It reported $408,087 in cash outside the trust. Net income hit $1.6 million, nearly all from trust interest, not from operations.
The common stock trades under the last reported per-share trust value. The gap is small, but with pre-deal SPACs, a few cents often make a difference. Investors look at how the stock compares to the cash they could get back if they choose to redeem after a merger proposal they don’t like.
Vendome still has no deal signed, which keeps the shares stuck in place. News of a transaction might break that, if investors like the sector, the price, and how it’s being funded. Without a deal, this looks like mostly a cash, time, and optionality play.
Slight gains in the big U.S. indexes Tuesday helped support small-caps and shell-company stocks. The S&P 500 rose 0.21%, the Nasdaq gained 0.24% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.31%, according to Investing.com.
The risk is clear. If the target underperforms, if redemptions are high or deal costs climb, or if the deadline is missed, common shareholders may be left relying on the trust for value. Warrants could end up worthless when no business combination happens in time. Vendome’s prospectus also allows trust interest withdrawals for working capital or taxes.
The next thing to watch isn’t Tuesday’s penny uptick. Investors want to see if Vendome can put out a target that justifies pricing the shares over cash. For now, VNME keeps trading as a SPAC with no operating deal yet.