You should consider carefully all of the risks described in our
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31,
2021 filed with the SEC on March 31, 2022, our Quarterly
Reports on Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on May 13, 2022,
August 8, 2022 and November 7, 2022 and in the other
reports filed or to be filed with the SEC before making a decision
to invest in our securities. Furthermore, if any of the following
events occur, our business, financial condition and operating
results may be materially adversely affected or we could face
liquidation. In that event, the trading price of our securities
could decline, and you could lose all or part of your investment.
The risks and uncertainties described in the aforementioned filings
and below are not the only ones we face. Additional risks and
uncertainties that we are unaware of, or that we currently believe
are not material, may also become important factors that adversely
affect our business, financial condition and operating results or
result in our liquidation.
There are no assurances that the Articles Extension will enable us
to complete a Business Combination.
Approving the Articles Extension involves a number of risks. Even
if the Articles Extension is approved, ARYA can provide no
assurances that a Business Combination will be consummated prior to
the Articles Extension Date or the relevant Additional Articles
Extension Date, if applicable. Our ability to consummate a Business
Combination is dependent on a variety of factors, many of which are
beyond our control, including the ability to reach agreement on the
definitive terms of a Business Combination. If the Articles
Extension is approved and ARYA determines that it is in the best
interest of its shareholders to pursue a Business Combination, ARYA
expects to seek shareholder approval of such Business Combination.
We are required to offer shareholders the opportunity to redeem
shares in connection with the Articles Extension, and we will be
required to offer shareholders redemption rights again in
connection with any shareholder vote to approve a Business
Combination. Even if the Articles Extension or a Business
Combination are approved by our shareholders, it is possible that
redemptions will leave us with insufficient cash to consummate a
Business Combination on commercially acceptable terms, or at all.
The fact that we will have separate redemption periods in
connection with the Articles Extension and a Business Combination
vote could exacerbate these risks. Other than in connection with a
redemption offer or liquidation, our shareholders may be unable to
recover their investment except through sales of our shares on the
open market. The price of our shares may be volatile, and there can
be no assurance that shareholders will be able to dispose of our
shares at favorable prices, or at all.
Changes to laws or regulations or in how such laws or regulations
are interpreted or applied, or a failure to comply with any laws,
regulations, interpretations or applications, may adversely affect
our business, including our ability to negotiate and complete our
initial Business Combination.
We are subject to the laws and regulations, and interpretations and
applications of such laws and regulations, of national, regional,
state and local governments and non-U.S. jurisdictions. In
particular, we are required to comply with certain SEC and other
legal and regulatory requirements, and our consummation of an
initial Business Combination may be contingent upon our ability to
comply with certain laws, regulations, interpretations and
applications and any post-Business Combination company may be
subject to additional laws, regulations, interpretations and
applications. Compliance with, and monitoring of, the foregoing may
be difficult, time consuming and costly. Those laws and regulations
and their interpretation and application may also change from time
to time, and those changes could have a material adverse effect on
our business, including our ability to negotiate and complete an
initial Business Combination. A failure to comply with applicable
laws or regulations, as interpreted and applied, could have a
material adverse effect on our business, including our ability to
negotiate and complete an initial Business Combination. The SEC
has, in the past year, adopted certain rules and may, in the future
adopt other rules, which may have a material effect on our
activities and on our ability to consummate an initial Business
Combination, including the SPAC Proposed Rules.
The SEC has issued proposed rules to regulate special purpose
acquisition companies. Certain of the procedures that we, a
Business Combination target, or others may determine to undertake
in connection with such proposals may increase our costs and the
time needed to complete a Business Combination and may constrain
the circumstances under which we could complete a Business
Combination. The need for compliance with the SPAC Proposed Rules
may cause us to liquidate the funds in the Trust Account or
liquidate ARYA at an earlier time than we might otherwise
choose.
On March 30, 2022, the SEC issued the SPAC Rule Proposals
relating, among other items, to disclosures in business combination
transactions between SPACs such as us and private operating
companies; the condensed financial statement requirements
applicable to transactions involving shell companies; the use of
projections by