The deal is transactional and the mechanism is worth noting. Goodvision AI is taking the SPAC route to a NASDAQ listing, a path that fell out of favor after 2021’s SPAC correction but hasn’t disappeared for companies operating in high-growth sectors with institutional interest.
The SEC filing confirms the core terms: Goodvision AI shareholders will receive 18 million ordinary shares of Calisa, with up to 3.6 million additional earnout shares available depending on post-merger performance milestones. The combined entity retains the Goodvision AI name and remains listed under the ALIS ticker.
Goodvision AI provides multi-cloud professional services, cloud redistribution, AI computing, and hybrid cloud-edge infrastructure. The deal was signed in early March 2026. Closing is expected in the second half of 2026, subject to shareholder approval and standard regulatory conditions, typical mechanics for a transaction of this type.
At $180 million, this is a small deal by AI market standards. The strategic read isn’t the size, it’s the pathway. AI infrastructure companies serving the gaming, crypto, and video processing sectors are increasingly visible SPAC targets as institutional investors seek exposure to AI compute without the concentration risk of the megacap names. This deal fits that pattern cleanly.