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Business/Finance
See other Business/Finance Articles

Title: Remington's bankruptcy could be the tip of the iceberg
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/com ... MXQ?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartandhp
Published: Feb 17, 2018
Author: Eliza Ronalds-Hannon and Polly Mosendz
Post Date: 2018-02-18 08:21:31 by BTP Holdings
Keywords: None
Views: 119

Remington's bankruptcy could be the tip of the iceberg

Bloomberg

Eliza Ronalds-Hannon and Polly Mosendz

1 day ago

00:24 02:09

Remington settlement in peril

Video by CNBC

Quotes in the article
Prospect Capital Corp
PSEC

6.82
+0.08
+1.19%

Firearms companies face declining sales, falling stock prices and tremendous debt. Gunmaker American Outdoor Brands Corp., formerly known as Smith & Wesson, has seen its stock plummet by almost half, compared with 2017. On Monday, Remington Outdoor Co., an iconic 200-year-old American firearms manufacturer, announced it’s planning to file for bankruptcy.

With Republicans in control of Washington, there’s little chance of firearms regulation, even in the face of Wednesday’s massacre in Florida. When Barack Obama was president or Democrats controlled Congress, gun sales would generally rise after a mass shooting for fear of more restrictive laws. The gun lobby pushed these worries despite a lack of significant legislative effort by the Obama administration. Now that Donald Trump is in the Oval Office, fear of new gun laws has receded, industry executives said. And so have sales, hurting both retailers and manufactures such as Remington.

In December, James Debney, chief executive officer of American Outdoor, said “fear-based” buying of firearms had stopped. According to data collected by the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System, a barometer for firearms sales, January 2018 was the slowest in gun purchases since 2012. Even on Thursday, after gunmaker stocks rose in pre-market trading, the shares headed back down by afternoon. (The assault rifle used in the Parkland high school attack was a Smith & Wesson AR-15, police said.)

Following gun stores and manufacturers, the next victim of the industry’s political success could be distributors. Because most are privately owned, earnings data is hard to come by. Still, company debt can offer a glimpse into their financial health. The declining performance of a $140 million loan to distributor United Sporting Cos., for example, suggests there may be a problem. “When there are elections that go a certain way, there tends to be a slowdown in sales.”

United is a private equity-owned holding company whose subsidiaries include Ellett Brothers and Jerry’s Sports Center, two gun distributors who work with over 30,000 independent retailers across all 50 states (Sturm Ruger & Co. says 15 percent of its sales are to the two subsidiaries). They distribute hunting and shooting sports products, including handguns, ammunition, silencers and holsters. Jerry’s was named “distributor of the year” by Marlin Firearms, a company owned by Remington.

A $140 million loan extended to United fell to less than half of its face value last year, according to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filings by the loan’s holder, the business development company Prospect Capital Corp.

Since Prospect makes loans to private companies but has issued shares to the public, it’s required to disclose its financials, even when the companies on the hook for the loan are not. In Prospect’s annual report for 2017, the company said a fair value of its loan to United was almost $47 million—around 33 percent of its face value. That was down from 94 percent in its report for the quarter ended March 31, 2017.

Michael Grier Eliasek, a director of Prospect, said in the securities filing that United had been hit by a cyclical slowdown in gun sales, as well as by the bankruptcy of a major customer, sporting goods retailer Gander Mountain.

United and Prospect didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

“When there are elections that go a certain way, there tends to be a slowdown in sales to the firearms sector for the first six or nine months or so, and then there’s a more of a normalization thereafter,” Eliasek said in an August conference call when he was asked about the write-down, which at that time was 59 percent of face value.


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