What Happened to Bird Global?
Ticker: BRDSSPAC Year: 2021Merger: 2021
Return
-100.0%
Current Price
$0
Peak Price
$14
Trust Size
$160M
Summary
Bird, the electric scooter-sharing company, went public via SPAC in 2021 at a $2.3 billion valuation. The company filed bankruptcy in December 2023 with just $3.3 million in cash, after burning through hundreds of millions.
What Happened
Bird was a poster child of the micro-mobility craze, founded in 2017 by Travis VanderZanden, a former Uber and Lyft executive. The company became synonymous with electric scooters littering city sidewalks and went public through a merger with Switchback II Corp in November 2021.
The scooter business model had fundamental problems that the SPAC merger couldn't solve. Scooters suffered from vandalism, theft, and rapid wear â average vehicle lifespans were measured in months, not years. Cities imposed increasingly restrictive regulations, limiting where scooters could operate and how many could be deployed.
Bird burned through cash at a staggering rate, spending on scooter fleets, operations staff, and expansion into new markets. The company projected $800 million in revenue by 2023 but managed only $260 million. A 1-for-30 reverse stock split in late 2023 couldn't save the stock from penny-stock territory.
By December 2023, Bird filed Chapter 11 with just $3.3 million in cash â barely enough to keep the lights on for a week. The assets were sold to existing lenders, and Bird continued operations under new ownership. For investors who bought into the SPAC, the scooters had essentially scooted away with their money.
Key People
Timeline
2021-11-04
SPAC merger with Switchback II closes
2022-09-01
Announces layoffs and cost-cutting measures
2023-09-01
1-for-30 reverse stock split
2023-12-20
Files Chapter 11 with $3.3M in cash