Barclays Capital disclosed a 4.31% stake in Churchill Capital Corp X as of mid-January, down from 8.63% in November, according to an SEC filing published Tuesday. The timing places the reduction days before a Thursday shareholder vote on Churchill X's merger with an undisclosed quantum computing target. The stake trimming removes roughly $18 million in exposure at current share prices, based on Churchill X's $237 million trust value at year-end.
The filing does not specify whether Barclays sold shares outright or redeemed them into the trust ahead of the merger deadline. Churchill X traded at $11.14 after hours Tuesday, a 1.8% decline from the prior close. The trust holds approximately $10.35 per share in short-term Treasuries, meaning shareholders can redeem at a modest premium to market price if the deal closes. Barclays' reduction suggests the bank opted for liquidity over holding through the business combination.
This matters because institutional exits before SPAC votes often predict high redemption rates, which can leave surviving public companies undercapitalized and volatile. Churchill X raised $230 million in its November 2021 IPO and extended its merger deadline twice. If redemptions exceed 80% of the trust, the deal sponsor typically negotiates a PIPE or abandons the transaction. Barclays' move is not unusual among SPAC underwriters, but the magnitude—halving a position in eight weeks—points to internal risk assessment around the quantum target's post-merger float and institutional support.
The broader pattern is instructive. SPAC redemption rates averaged 93% across deals that closed in 2023, per SPAC Research, leaving many de-SPACs trading below $5 within six months. Barclays participated in 12 SPAC underwritings between 2020 and 2022, and its trading desk has quietly exited or reduced positions in at least five of those vehicles ahead of business combinations, based on public filings. The bank's equity capital markets group no longer actively pitches SPAC structures to sponsors, according to two people familiar with internal strategy discussions.
Allocators should watch Thursday's vote results and the trust redemption figure, which Churchill X must disclose within four business days of the meeting. If redemptions exceed 75%, expect the target company to renegotiate terms or terminate. The sponsor, Churchill Capital founder Michael Klein, has a mixed record on post-merger stock performance: three of his prior seven SPACs trade below $3, while two remain above $10. Klein's prior quantum-adjacent bet, a 2021 investment in a semiconductor SPAC, unwound after redemptions left the combined entity with $11 million in net cash.
The vote is scheduled for 10:00 a.m. Eastern. Proxy advisors ISS and Glass Lewis have not published recommendations. Barclays declined to comment on the stake reduction.