2021 to present: Decline
On April 12, 2021, B. Riley became a constituent member of the S&P 600 index.[19]
In August 2021, B. Riley acquired investment firm 272 Capital.[20]
In January 2022, B. Riley acquired middle market M&A advisor FocalPoint for $175 million.[21]
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 special-purpose acquisition company 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%.[22][23][24]
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.[25][26]
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 John Hughes and Prophecy Asset Management.[24][27] 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.[28][29]
In March 2024, B. Riley posted a wider quarterly loss and halved its dividends. It also delayed filing its annual report, citing a review of transactions with Kahn. Its shares declined 15% after the announcement.[30] On April 24, 2024, B. Riley filed its annual report after its auditor, Marcum LLP signed it off resulting in shares soaring 61%. In the report the audit cited multiple material weaknesses in the company’s reporting, and some of the previously reported data was revised. It also noted concerns about the fraud case involving Kahn but stated B. Riley had no ties to it after it redid an internal investigation with the help of Winston & Strawn.[31]
In August 2024, Bryant Riley made an unsolicited offer to take the company private at $7.00 per share, a 39% premium to the stock closing price the day the offer was made, though significantly lower than the $17 per share the stock was trading at one week prior.[32][33] The company also eliminated its dividends, citing the need to prioritize cutting leverage.[33]
On September 9, 2024, B. Riley outlined preliminary plans to sell assets and renegotiate financings in order to bolster its balance sheet. The company confirmed that it is in talks to sell a majority stake in Great American Group and that it has a non-binding commitment for financing of its B. Riley and bebe brands businesses. The two transactions are expected to raise approximately $410 million of gross cash proceeds. These funds would be used to pay down existing debt facilities by the end of 2024.[33]