Visão geral da empresa
Cambridge Acquisition Corp. operates as a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) dedicated to effecting a merger, amalgamation, share exchange, asset acquisition, share purchase, reorganization, or similar business combination with one or more businesses. The entity functions within the financial services sector, specifically engaging in the industry of shell companies designed to facilitate future business combinations rather than producing goods or services directly. Regarding its scale, the company currently has no disclosed market capitalization, does not report annual revenue, and has an undefined employee count based on available filings. The absence of a reported market cap and revenue figures indicates that the company exists primarily as a vehicle for a future transaction rather than as an operating enterprise with established earnings or sales volume. This structural characteristic is typical for SPACs in the early stages of their lifecycle, where the primary asset is the potential of the eventual merger target rather than current operational performance.
Saúde financeira
The company reports a Net Income of $-379,068 for the trailing twelve months, while Revenue and EBITDA are listed as N/A. The significant gap between reported revenue and net income, coupled with negative income in the absence of explicit revenue figures, reveals a cost structure heavily weighted toward operating expenses required to maintain the corporate shell and regulatory compliance. Free Cash Flow is listed as N/A, which suggests the company has not generated positive cash flow from operations sufficient to fund capital expenditures, relying instead on trust account proceeds or financing arrangements. All three margin metrics—Gross Margin, Operating Margin, and Profit Margin—are recorded at 0.0%, indicating that the company has not yet generated gross profit or operating income from any commercial activity. The balance sheet shows a Price to Book ratio of -45.83, while Cash and Debt are both listed as N/A, meaning a direct comparison of liquidity against leverage cannot be calculated from current data. The Current Ratio stands at 0.05, a figure that indicates severe short-term liquidity constraints where current liabilities significantly exceed current assets. Return on Equity and Return on Assets are both N/A, reflecting the fact that traditional return metrics are not applicable or calculable for a company that has not yet completed a merger to generate equity value or asset utilization.
Avaliação de valorização
Trailing P/E, Forward P/E, and Price to Sales are all listed as N/A, preventing a direct comparison of earnings-based valuation multiples. The Price to Book ratio is reported at -45.83, a negative multiple that indicates the market price is trading well below the book value, a common occurrence for SPACs that have not yet consummated a deal and may carry negative equity on their balance sheets. EV/EBITDA is also N/A, suggesting that enterprise value multiples are not currently relevant as the company lacks the earnings necessary to calculate this metric. The stock's 52-week high is $0.28 and the 52-week low is $0.25. Based on these parameters, the current trading price sits within a narrow band defined by these extremes, reflecting the high volatility typical of shell companies where pricing is driven more by merger speculation than fundamental earnings power. Beta is listed as N/A, meaning there is no available data to quantify the stock's price volatility relative to the broader market index.
Growth & Income
Revenue Growth and Earnings Growth for the year-over-year period are both listed as N/A, as the company has not yet generated the revenue streams necessary to calculate growth rates. Consequently, it is impossible to determine whether earnings are growing faster or slower than revenue because both absolute figures are currently undefined or negative. The company does not pay dividends, as evidenced by a Dividend Yield of N/A and a Payout Ratio of N/A. Since the entity does not distribute income to shareholders, any retained earnings—however limited by the current net loss—are theoretically available for reinvestment into the search for a merger target or for covering administrative costs. The overall growth and income profile is characterized by a lack of historical financial performance, with the company's value entirely dependent on the successful execution of a future business combination rather than current operational expansion or dividend generation.