Recycling software startup Rubicon to go public via $2bn SPAC deal

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Leonardo DiCaprio-backed Rubicon Technologies, a software maker for waste and recycling solutions, on Thursday agreed to go public through a merger with blank-check firm Founder SPAC in a deal valuing the combined company at about $2 billion.

Climate awareness and investor interest in sustainable business practices has surged this year with money managers looking to factor in environmental social governance (ESG) policies as impact-investing gains momentum.

Rubicon, founded in 2008, provides technology-driven solutions for waste management to enterprises such as Starbucks and Apple in order to limit their emissions and carbon footprint.

The deal with Founder SPAC will provide Rubicon with up to $432 million in gross proceeds — about $321 million from the special purpose acquisition company’s (SPAC) trust account and $111 million from investors such as Palantir Technologies, the New Zealand Super Fund and Rodina Capital.

SPACs are publicly-listed companies formed with the intention of merging with a private company at a later date. For the company going public, a SPAC merger serves as an alternative to a traditional IPO.

After the deal closes, Rubicon will list on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “RBT.”