DETROIT (Reuters) - ChargePoint Inc, one of the world"s oldest and largest electric vehicle charging networks, said on Thursday it will go public by merging with Switchback Energy Acquisition Corp SBE.N in a deal that values the company at $2.4 billion. The deal is expected to close near the end of the year and the company will be named ChargePoint Holdings Inc. A trading symbol on the New York Stock Exchange has not been identified. Reuters last week reported ChargePoint and Switchback were nearing a deal. Switchback is a special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) that raised $300 million in an initial public offering in July 2019. “The EV charging industry is accelerating and it is expected that charging infrastructure investment will be $190 billion by 2030,” Switchback Chief Executive Scott McNeill said. “We believe (ChargePoint) will continue to grow its strong market position as the EV industry evolves.” The deal will raise about $493 million in proceeds that ChargePoint will use to expand in North America and Europe. It includes $225 million from Baillie Gifford, Neuberger Berman Alternatives Advisors and other institutional investors. Baillie Gifford is one of the largest shareholders in EV segment leader Tesla Inc TSLA.O. “Being ready to be public means that you’re investing in scaling the platforms you already have because this addressable market is very, very large,” ChargePoint Chief Executive Pasquale Romano, who will continue to lead the company after the deal closes, told Reuters. A SPAC is a shell company that raises money through an initial public offering to buy an operating entity, typically within two years. SPACs have emerged as a quick route to the stock market for companies, particularly auto technology startups, and have proven popular with investors seeking to echo Tesla’s high stock valuation. Other EV companies with SPAC deals include Fisker, Lordstown Motors and Canoo. Electric and fuel cell vehicle startup Nikola NKLA.O, which has been called a fraud by a short seller and seen its founder resign, is another. Prior to the SPAC deal, ChargePoint, which operates but does not own its charging network, had raised more than $660 million. The Campbell, California-based company, founded in 2007, has attracted funding from both private venture investors and large strategic investors, including Daimler DAIGn.DE, BMW BMWG.DE, Siemens AG SIEGn.DE and U.S. energy firms Chevron Corp CVX.N and American Electric Power Co Inc. AEP.N ChargePoint operates more than 115,000 charging ports globally, mostly in North America, and previously said it is aiming to increase that to 2.5 million by 2025. ChargePoint’s revenue was $147 million last year and it forecasts growth to more than $2 billion in 2026, according to slides presented to investors. It expects an operating profit of $86 million in 2024, up from a net loss of $133 million in 2019, and a $340 million profit in 2026.
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