Английская Википедия:B. Riley Financial

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox company

B. Riley Financial (referred to as B. Riley) is an American financial services company headquartered in Los Angeles, California. The company is known for its investment banking services regarding small cap companies as well as retail liquidation services.[1][2] It has also acquired several organizations and companies in recent years.

Background

Establishment and acquisitions

In 1997, Bryant Riley founded B. Riley & Co. as a stock-picking firm serving institutional investors by providing research on small companies. The firm was fined $5,000 that year by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for lax record-keeping.[1][3]

Initially Riley did not want the firm being involved in investment banking due to conflict of interest issues. However, in July 2003, the firm acquired Friend & Co., a boutique investment bank where Riley once worked.[1][4]

In 2012, B. Riley acquired Caris & Co., a stock research firm to increase its sales and trading business in the brokerage industry during a slowdown in the industry.[3][5]

In June 2014, B. Riley & Co. merged with appraisal and liquidation service provider, Great American Group to form B. Riley Financial, a company list on the OTC Bulletin Board under the ticker "RILY".[2][5][6]

In July 2015, B. Riley was approved to be uplisted to the Nasdaq exchange.[7][8]

In February 2017, B. Riley investment banking company, FBR & Co. in a $160 million deal to further scale its existing business.[9][6]

In May 2017, B. Riley acquired brokerage company, Wunderlich Securities for $67 million to expand its wealth management business.[6][10][11][12]

In August 2018, B. Riley acquired GlassRatner Advisory & Capital Group, a restructuring advisory firm to expand its advisory presence.[6][10]

In November 2018, B. Riley acquired 49% stake of broker-dealer National Holdings Corp from Fortress Biotech for $22.9 million. In January 2021, B. Riley acquired the rest of National Holdings Corp. In July 2022, National Holdings Corp's largest subsidiary, National Securities closed down after 75 years with its business being integrated into B. Riley. This came after National Securities was penalized by Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).[13][14][15]

In April 2020, it was reported that B. Riley was benefitting from the retail apocalypse especially in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As many brick-and-mortar retail stores closed, this gave B. Riley a lot of opportunities to provide liquation services.[2]

In June 2020, B. Riley acquired Alderney Advisors, a restructuring firm that specializes in the automotive industry.[16]

On April 12, 2021, B. Riley became a constituent member of the S&P 600 index.[17]

In August 2021, B. Riley acquired investment firm 272 Capital.[18]

In January 2022, B. Riley acquired middle market M&A advisor FocalPoint for $175 million.[19]

2023 stock decline

On February 8, 2023, Wolfpack Research announced it held a short position in B. Riley. It released a report that criticized the company stating during the everything bubble period of 2020 to 2021, B. Riley had overleveraged to buy speculative assets and lent money to companies that have a high likelihood of defaulting. Examples included Exela Technologies which owed B. Riley $75 million and had failed to complete interest payments on another loan on January 17, B Riley Principal 250 Merger Corp, a SPAC that would result in a $175 million loss if it failed to find a target by May 11 and Babcock and Wilcox which owed B. Riley $110 million but was believed by Wolfpack Research to be heading toward bankruptcy. In addition, Wolfpack Research stated that 40% of operating companies in B. Riley's portfolio per its Form 13F had going concern issues. Following the report, B. Riley's stock declined by 11%.[20][21][22]

In May 2023, it was noted that B. Riley paid a dividend yield of nearly 11% which was much higher than its peers. It was speculated that the big reason for the increase was due to the sell-off of its stock. This was due to the slowdown in investment banking business as well as unrealized losses from investments. There was skepticism on whether paying such high dividends yields was sustainable. The stock had declined by almost 60% since the start of 2022 and the company's revenue in 2022 had declined by $474 million compared to the previous year.[23][24]

On November 2, 2023, Prophecy Asset Management co-founder John Hughes pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit securities fraud from 2015 to 2020. B. Riley which was alleged to have played a role in it, denied it knew about the fraud.[22]

On November 13, 2023, shares of B. Riley dropped 35% after it disclosed unrealized investment losses and the fact S&P Global Ratings downgraded Franchise Group to junk status, a firm which it acquired in May 2023 as part of an investor consortium for $2.6 billion. B. Riley had lent its founder Brian Kahn $200 million and Kahn was identified as one of two co-conspirators in a securities fraud case related to Hughes. [22][25] In January 2024, it was reported that the SEC was investigating B. Riley for its connection to the securities fraud case which lead to its stock price declining 10%. At this point B. Riley was one of the most shorted companies in the financial sector. [26][27]

Business operations

Business model

As of 2022, B. Riley has six operating segments: capital markets, wealth management, auction and liquidation, financial consulting, communications and brands. Capital markets is the largest segment by revenue followed by communications and wealth management.[1][2][24]

As of 2023, Riley is currently the largest shareholder and owns 23% of the company shares.[28]

Portfolio companies

In May 2016, B. Riley acquired United Online for $170 million.[29]

In November 2017, B. Riley outbid Carnegie Technologies to acquire MagicJack for $143 million.[30]

In November 2019, B. Riley launched a fashion brand portfolio by investing $116.5 million to acquire majority ownership of six fashion brands. These included Catherine Malandrino, Joan Vass, Limited Too and Nanette Lepore.[31]

In May 2023, B. Riley acquired an equity interest in Scotch & Soda.[32]

Legal issues

Gary Wunderlich

In January 2015, Wunderlich Securities acquired New York brokerage firm Dominick & Dickerman in an all-stock acquisition deal worth $8.3 million. Dominick and its former chairman, Michael Campbell sued Wunderlich Securities and its former owner, Gary Wunderlich alleging fraud and misrepresentation by Wunderlich Securities regarding its financial condition when purchasing the firm. In April 2020, FINRA sided with Dominick and Campbell resulting in Wunderlich Securities being liable to pay nearly $11 million B. Riley had to pay the full amount to settle the dispute.[12]

In June 2020, Wunderlich sued B. Riley to confirm his indemnification in the matter and reimbursement for his legal fees in the arbitration.[12] In June 2023, B. Riley rejected this claim.[33]

In January 2022, B. Riley sued Wunderlich, alleging he unlawfully skirted his liability in April 2020. Wunderlich's lawyer stated B. Riley had agreed to indemnify his client as part of the 2017 purchase.[12]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Investment banks Шаблон:Authority control