The Company has historically accounted for its 18,400,000 public warrants (the “Public Warrants”) and 9,360,000 private warrants (the “Private Warrants,” and, together with the Public Warrants, the “Warrants”), issued by Spartan Energy Acquisition Corp. in conjunction with its initial public offering on August 9, 2018, as a component of stockholders’ equity (deficit). The accounting treatment was based on the Company’s interpretation and application of Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) 480,
Distinguishing Liabilities from Equity
,
and ASC
815-40,
Derivatives and Hedging—Contracts in Entity’s Own Equity
. The Company evaluated the provisions within the Warrant Agreement, dated August 9, 2018 (the “Warrant Agreement”), by and between the Company (f/k/a Spartan Energy Acquisition Corp.) and Continental Stock Transfer & Trust Company, as warrant agent (the “Warrant Agent”), that arise if future events fundamentally change the ownership or capitalization of the Company, such as a change in control of the entity, or its nationalization. The Company’s evaluation of potential tender offer scenarios and valuation models associated with the repricing of the Warrants concluded that the underlying economic outcomes would be the same across all classes of common stockholders and Warrant holders in the event of a fundamental change such as a tender offer or when determining the fair value of Warrants using variables consistent with the concepts of
inputs for an equity option. In the Original Form
10-K,
the Company concluded the Warrants satisfied the guidance within ASC
815-40
to permit equity classification, an accounting conclusion consistent with prior years as disclosed in the Company’s audited financial statements included in its registration statement on Form
S-1,
as amended, effective on December 1, 2020. Given the complexity of the analysis, the Company disclosed in the Original Form
10-K,
under Item 1A, Risk Factors, the risk that the Company could potentially need to reclassify the Warrants given the potential for an alternative view that the Warrants should be accounted for as a liability and subsequently remeasured through earnings and the corresponding material effect it could have on the Company’s reported financial information.