
ChampionsGate Acquisition Corporation Announces the Separate Trading of its Class A Ordinary Shares and Rights, Commencing on June 20, 2025
Monterey, CA, June 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- ChampionsGate Acquisition Corporation (the 'Company') (Nasdaq: CHPGU), a blank check company, today announced that, commencing on June 20, 2025, holders of the 7,475,000 units (the 'Units') sold in the Company's initial public offering (the 'Offering') including Units sold upon a full exercise of the underwriters' over-allotment option, may elect to separately trade the Class A ordinary shares and rights included in the Units. Any Units not separated will continue to trade on the NASDAQ Global Market ('NASDAQ') under the symbol 'CHPGU.' Any underlying Class A ordinary shares and rights that are separated will trade on the NASDAQ under the symbols 'CHPG' and 'CHPGR,' respectively. Holders of Units will need to have their brokers contact the Company's transfer agent, Continental Stock Transfer & Trust Company, in order to separate the holders' Units into Class A ordinary shares and rights.
The Units were initially offered by the Company in an underwritten offering. Clear Street LLC acted as the sole book-running manager for the Offering. A registration statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-283689) relating to these securities was declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the 'SEC') on May 14, 2025. The Offering was made only by means of a prospectus, copies of which may be obtained from Clear Street, Attn: Syndicate Department, 150 Greenwich Street, 45th floor, New York, NY 10007, or by email at ecm@clearstreet.io, or by visiting EDGAR on the SEC's website at www.sec.gov.
This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction.
About ChampionsGate Acquisition Corporation
ChampionsGate Acquisition Corporation is a blank check company incorporated in the Cayman Islands as an exempted company with limited liability for the purpose of effecting into a merger, share exchange, asset acquisition, share purchase, recapitalization, reorganization or similar business combination with one or more businesses or entities. Our efforts to identify a prospective target business will not be limited to a particular industry or geographic region.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release includes forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements are statements that are not historical facts. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ from the forward-looking statements. The Company expressly disclaims any obligations or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in the Company's expectations with respect thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any statement is based. No assurance can be given that the offering discussed above will be completed on the terms described, or at all. Forward-looking statements are subject to numerous conditions, many of which are beyond the control of the Company, including those set forth in the Risk Factors section of the Registration Statement and related preliminary prospectus filed in connection with the initial public offering with the SEC. Copies are available on the SEC's website, www.sec.gov.
Contact Information:
ChampionsGate Acquisition Corp.
Bala PadmakumarChairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Director 419 Webster StreetMonterey, CA 93940Email: bala@championsgate.bizSign in to access your portfolio
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Wall Street Journal
35 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Ashtead Posts Softer Profit; Says U.S. Listing On Track
Ashtead AHT -1.67%decrease; red down pointing triangle Group reported a decline in pretax profit for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025 on lower revenue, and said the move of its primary listing to the U.S. is on track. The London-listed equipment rental company–which makes the bulk of its business in the U.S.–on Tuesday reported a 6% decrease in pretax profit for the three months ended April 30 at $392 million.

Wall Street Journal
35 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Stock Market Today: Dow Futures Fall; Israel-Iran Conflict in Spotlight — Live Updates
U.S. stock futures fell after President Trump left the G-7 summit a day early without new trade deals, and the Iran-Israel conflict stretched into a fifth day. Oil futures rose around 1%. In leaving the summit in Canada early, Trump abandoned several conversations on trade, aimed at easing tensions over tariffs and other issues.


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
Flexibility Was The Promise. The Infinite Workday Is The Reality.
Flexibility was supposed to help—so why did the workday become infinite? We used to know when the workday started. And when it ended. Now? Not so much. According to Microsoft's latest Work Trend Index Special Report: Breaking Down the Infinite Workday, 40% of employees are already online by 6 a.m. A third are still answering emails at 10 p.m. And one in five is working on weekends. This isn't a policy. It's not a leadership choice. It's not even necessarily intentional. It's just what's happening. We unhooked work from the office. In the process, we unhooked it from time. The data shows we've gained something valuable—flexibility over where and when we work. But without clear norms or personal guardrails, that freedom has stretched across the entire day. Instead of working in ways that fit our lives, too many of us are working all the time—and often on the wrong things. Alexia Cambon, Head of Research for Copilot and the Future of Work at Microsoft, captured this moment perfectly when she joined me on The Future of Less Work podcast: We now live in an infinite workday. Not because we lack flexibility, but because we haven't yet learned how to use it in ways that truly serve us. What makes this even harder is that work isn't just longer—it's faster. Email starts the day, but by 8 a.m., real-time chat takes over and the tempo accelerates. Microsoft found that the average worker now receives 117 emails and 153 Teams chats every day. Mass messages are up. One-on-one threads are down. Flexibility has opened the door for asynchronous work. But without clarity on expectations, it's also created a culture of immediate response. Everyone works on their own schedule, yet somehow, everyone expects everyone else to be instantly available. We're not just working longer hours—we're working in a constant state of interruption. Somewhere along the way, we forgot how to protect our attention. Because if flexibility really worked the way we imagined, we'd be using our best hours for our best thinking. But the data tells a different story. At 11 a.m., during what should be peak mental clarity, meetings, messages, and app-switching all spike. Workers are interrupted every two minutes. We've unintentionally allowed our most productive hours to be consumed by reactive coordination. Focus hasn't disappeared—it's just been displaced by a culture of urgency. And nowhere is that urgency more visible than in how we meet. Meetings were already a pain point in many organizations even before Covid. Back then, calendar and conference room capacity governed meeting planning. Now that digital tools have removed those limits, we simply add everyone—and move even faster. Microsoft found that more than half of meetings are unplanned, 10% are scheduled last-minute, and large meetings with 65+ people are rising fastest. We often talk about meetings as a coordination problem—but what's really breaking us is the last-minute culture that surrounds them. As Cambon put it during our conversation: The result? We spend our most valuable hours in meetings we didn't plan, reacting to decisions we didn't make, with barely any time to think. We see the result in the third work peak of the triple peak day, which is no longer a pandemic-era glitch. Evening meetings are up 16%, and a third of workers return to email after 10 p.m. Document activity (Word, Excel, PowerPoint) spikes on weekends—when the noise dies down and people finally find time to think. Flexibility, once a promise of balance, now too often means always being available. And when everyone works on their own rhythm—but still expects immediate response—the result is a system with no real off switch. Without rest. Without recovery. This is the moment when many turn to AI with hope. And yes, it can help. AI can handle the clutter: drafting emails, summarizing notes, scheduling meetings. But if we treat that freed-up time as space to do even more, we're not fixing the problem—we're accelerating it. The point of AI isn't just productivity. It's possibility: the chance to work more intentionally, to let AI do the right work to allow us to reclaim time for deep focus—or for stepping away entirely. But that only works if we're willing to reimagine the cadence of the day. To let go of always-on. To be more deliberate about when we engage, and just as deliberate about when we don't. The good news? The flexibility is already there. The tools are in place. What's missing is a rhythm that makes the most of both—one that allows for focus, restoration, and meaningful contribution. And that rhythm doesn't come from a policy. It starts with us: with the choices we make about when to engage, what to prioritize, and how to create space for what matters most. We may not control everything, but we can learn to notice what we need—and set the boundaries and signals that guard it. That might mean protecting deep work hours. Letting AI handle the noise instead of adding more to it. Redefining productivity as energy well spent, not just hours filled. And when we do this together—through team agreements, shared expectations, and mutual respect for time—we turn flexibility from pressure into possibility. The shift requires more than individual change—it calls for shared norms. As Cambon emphasized: The future of work will be shaped by technology. But to truly work for people, it will need to be defined by people.