Company: COHN
Filing Date: 2025-03-12
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0001437749-25-007158
Chunk: 2969

Company: Cohen & Co Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-03-12
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 7
Chunk 2969
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 718.  Generally, the employee invests a de minimis amount and receives an allocation of the founder shares held by the sponsor entity.  The investment does not have any explicit vesting criteria associated with it.  Generally, the employee's investment will be worthless if the SPAC is liquidated and it will become worth something if the SPAC completes its business combination.  Therefore, we treat these grants as having a performance condition (i.e. the completion of the SPAC business combination).  Further, at the time of the investments, we treat this performance condition as being non-probable.  The effect of this is that we record no expense related to these investments until (and only if) the business combination is completed.  Upon completion of the business combination, we record compensation expense in an amount equal to the fair value of the grant.  The fair value of the grant is equal to the public trading price of the SPAC on the date of the grant adjusted for certain sale restrictions imposed on the shares the employee receives (generally, they are restricted for sale for some time period and subject to certain hurdle prices before they become freely tradeable).  We use a Monte Carlo simulation model to determine the appropriate discount to place on shares that are subject to hurdle prices.  The compensation amount is recorded with an offsetting credit to non-controlling interest.  From that point forward, the shares received by the employee are treated as part of the non-controlling interest and allocated income, expense, gains, and losses accordingly until the applicable sponsor entity is liquidated or otherwise de-consolidated.   

Investments in Special Purpose Acquisition Companies ("SPACs") Sponsor Entities

We invest in the sponsor entities of SPACs.  The sponsor entities are limited liability companies (each an "LLC") that pool their members' interests and invest in the private placement and founder shares (together, sponsor shares) of a SPAC.  The SPAC will also raise funds in a public offering and seek to complete a business combination within an agreed upon time frame.  The SPAC will use the proceeds raised from the sponsor shares to pay transaction and operating expenses during the period it is seeking a business combination.  The proceeds of the public offering are placed in an interest bearing trust and can only be used to complete the business combination and pay taxes on the interest earned.  Generally, the public investors must approve any business combination prior to its effectiveness.  If a business combination is not completed within the agreed