Fashion Investor and Retail Lender B. Riley Under SEC Probe

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Concerns raised at B. Riley Financial Inc. over certain dealings could mean trouble for some fashion firms and retailers.

Well-known in the distressed and special situations field, the investment bank takes on advisory roles in recapitalizations, debtor-in-possession financing, and exit facilities when companies are set to put their tour of bankruptcy court behind them. The company also is an investor in the fashion and retail sectors through its investment arm.

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Now B. Riley has bigger headaches as short sellers ponder the investment bank’s future.

On Monday, B. Riley’s stock price tumbled by more than 50 percent following a profit warning and the suspension of its dividend. The company’s second-quarter report estimated a net loss for the quarter ended June 30 in the range of $435 million to $475 million due to a write-down on its investment in Franchise Group (FRG) of between $330 million to $370 million and a Vintage Capital loan receivable. The loan’s primarily collateralized by equity interests in FRG. B. Riley acquired the FRG stake last year as part of a management-led buyout. According to a Bloomberg company profile, Vintage is an asset management firm founded and managed by Brian R. Kahn, who was the former CEO of FRG.

Bryant Riley, B. Riley’s chairman and co-CEO, during a call to Wall Street referenced issues related to alleged misconduct by Kahn, which resulted in the company and himself receiving subpoenas in July from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Kahn was the former hedge fund manager at the now collapsed Prophecy Asset Management.

“These primarily related to the company’s dealings with Brian Kahn. We are responding to the subpoenas [and] are fully cooperating with the SEC,” Riley said.

A Bloomberg story indicated that the SEC probe is widening to include whether B. Riley had sufficiently disclosed the investment risks in some of its assets.

A B. Riley spokeswoman on Tuesday declined comment regarding the reported widening SEC probe. Instead, she referenced the company’s prior disclosures of two separate investigations, one “an internal review with the assistance of Sullivan & Cromwell LLP as outside counsel, and a separate independent investigation with the assistance of Winston & Strawn LLP as independent legal counsel.” She also said that the both investigations concluded that the “company and its executives, including Mr. Riley, had no involvement with, or knowledge of, any alleged misconduct concerning Mr. Kahn or any of his affiliates.”