Carousell terminated merger discussions with L Catterton Asia Acquisition Corp last week, ending an 18-month pursuit of public markets that would have valued the Singapore-based classifieds platform near $1.4 billion. The collapse leaves L Catterton's $360 million SPAC without a combination target nine months before its March 2026 liquidation deadline. No termination fee applies.
The timing reflects deteriorating appetite for consumer internet assets in Southeast Asia. Carousell had filed confidential S-4 paperwork with the SEC in November 2024, anticipating a Q1 2025 close. L Catterton's SPAC traded at $9.73 when talks ended—2.7% below trust value—suggesting arbitrageurs had priced in deal risk since January. Carousell's Series D extension round in August 2023 raised $56 million at a $1.1 billion post-money valuation from Telenor and STIC Investments. The SPAC structure would have delivered $285 million in gross proceeds assuming no redemptions, which recent comparable transactions show was unrealistic.
This marks the third Southeast Asian SPAC termination since February. Grab-backed superapp Funding Societies walked from a Vertex-sponsored vehicle in March. PropertyGuru's 2022 SPAC merger—the region's sole consummated deal—now trades 68% below its $1.7 billion debut valuation. Carousell operates peer-to-peer marketplaces across eight markets with 50 million listings monthly. Revenue grew 34% year-over-year in 2024 to approximately $180 million, driven by take-rate expansion in autos and property verticals. The company is not profitable on a GAAP basis. Gross merchandise value reached $2.8 billion in 2024, concentrated in Singapore (41%), Taiwan (28%), and Hong Kong (19%).
The collapse forces a reset on Carousell's liquidity path. The company last raised primary capital 19 months ago. Telenor—owner of 18%—has publicly stated it expects an exit by 2027 as part of its Asia portfolio rationalization. Naver holds 23% through its 2021 investment. Management now faces a choice between extending private runway or pursuing a direct listing in Singapore, where the SGX introduced a dual-class structure in 2023 specifically to retain late-stage tech companies. Neither option solves the valuation compression problem. Regional comps trade at 1.2x forward revenue versus the 7.8x multiple implied in Carousell's SPAC structure.
L Catterton Asia Acquisition has $9.60 per share in trust and 41 weeks to announce a substitute target. The firm's flagship $1.5 billion Southeast Asia growth fund closed in 2022 with exposure to eight consumer companies in the region. SPAC sponsor economics require a combination to avoid forfeiting founder shares worth approximately $90 million at issuance. Market participants expect L Catterton to pursue a consumer brand with hard assets rather than another marketplace model.
Watch for Carousell's next funding announcement within 90 days—existing burn rate and the Telenor timeline create a visible capital event. SGX filings from comparable platforms will clarify whether direct listing appetite exists at realistic valuations. L Catterton's replacement target search, if it surfaces in April or May, will indicate whether any Asia SPAC economics still function at current redemption rates. The sector now has four active Asia-focused SPACs with combination deadlines before December 2025.