Browse the full directors' dealings record of Artius Acquisition Inc., a listed issuer based in United States. Shares are listed on US US, under the supervision of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Others sector, Artius Acquisition Inc. has published 6 reports. The latest transaction was filed on 25 June 2021 — Acquisition. Among the most active insiders: Drucker Charles. All data is free.
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Artius Acquisition Inc. (ticker AACQ) was a U.S.-listed SPAC that traded on Nasdaq in the United States prior to its business combination with Origin Materials. From an equity research perspective, Artius was not a conventional operating company with manufacturing, software, or consumer sales exposure; it was a special purpose acquisition vehicle formed to identify and merge with a private business that could be brought to the public markets. The company was established in 2020 and raised capital through an IPO structured as a blank-check offering, with the stated purpose of pursuing a merger, share exchange, asset acquisition, share purchase, reorganization, or similar business combination. Its corporate base was in New York, placing it within the core U.S. capital-markets ecosystem. ([artiuscapital.com](https://www.artiuscapital.com/documents/FG/artius_full/news/607717_Press_Release_Final_July_13_2020.pdf?utm_source=openai)) Artius’ “business model” was therefore transactional rather than operational. Its value proposition centered on sourcing a target, negotiating terms, providing public-market capital, and executing a de-SPAC process. The most important event in its corporate history was the announced merger with Origin Materials, a company positioned around renewable materials and decarbonization of the materials supply chain. SEC materials show that Artius’ board approved the merger in 2021, along with domestication from the Cayman Islands to Delaware and the combination with Micromidas, Inc., doing business as Origin Materials. Following closing, Artius ceased to exist as an independent public company under the AACQ ticker. ([sec.gov](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1802457/000119312521073546/d147960ds4.htm?utm_source=openai)) For French-speaking investors in France, Belgium, and Switzerland, the key takeaway is that AACQ does not represent a current standalone operating franchise with recurring product revenue. Historically, it functioned as a sponsor-led capital markets vehicle, backed by a management team with investment and deal-making credentials. Its competitive position was defined within the highly crowded SPAC universe, where performance depended on sponsor quality, access to proprietary opportunities, and the ability to structure an attractive merger for shareholders. The company’s geographic footprint was primarily U.S.-based, although the sponsor ecosystem and capital sourcing had an international dimension. ([artiuscapital.com](https://www.artiuscapital.com/documents/FG/artius_full/news/607717_Press_Release_Final_July_13_2020.pdf?utm_source=openai)) On recent developments, the relevant point is that AACQ’s story is largely historical: it was transformed through the Origin Materials transaction, and newer market pages and filings refer to separate Artius II entities rather than the original AACQ issuer. As a result, any current investor attention around SEC Form 4 insider transactions should be interpreted in the context of the legacy SPAC structure, its former sponsor group, and its M&A history rather than ongoing operating fundamentals. ([sec.gov](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1802457/000180245723000058/ars2023.pdf?utm_source=openai))