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						Exclusive: Hedge fund Whitebox places big bet on 
						gunmaker Remington
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		 [November 11, 2019]  By 
		Jessica DiNapoli 
 (Reuters) - Whitebox Advisors LLC, a credit-focused hedge fund, has been 
		quietly capitalizing on Wall Street's ambivalence toward gun 
		manufacturers by replacing some banks as a lender to Remington Outdoor 
		Company.
 
 Whitebox, whose assets under management have grown from $2 billion to $6 
		billion in the last six years, became a major lender to Remington this 
		year, according to people familiar with the transactions that allowed it 
		to build its position.
 
 Minneapolis-based Whitebox refinanced a $193 million loan to Remington 
		that had been provided by seven banks, according to the sources. Many of 
		the banks have been under pressure from their customers and some 
		politicians to sever ties with the gun industry.
 
 Remington, the maker of an AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle used in the 
		Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting of six adults and 20 children in 
		2012, filed for bankruptcy in 2017 amid declining gun sales. It exited 
		bankruptcy last year, but still faces a lawsuit from the families of the 
		Sandy Hook victims in the U.S. Supreme Court over its role as a gun 
		manufacturer.
 
		
		 
		
 Whitebox's investment in Remington illustrates how some hedge funds, 
		whose investors include pension funds, financial institutions and 
		high-net-worth individuals, do not share the same reputational concerns 
		as many banks. It also underscores the emergence of hedge funds as 
		"shadow banks," replacing traditional lenders to companies.
 
 "Given the baggage of these particular loans for banks that are public 
		companies, it is an invitation to hedge funds to get in and relieve the 
		bank of an asset they don't really want to hold," said Campbell Harvey, 
		a professor finance at Duke University. "A hedge fund is a private 
		entity, it doesn't need to answer to public shareholders."
 
 Whitebox, which was a creditor of Remington before it filed for 
		bankruptcy, first stepped in to replace Bank of America Corp as a lender 
		last year, according to the sources.
 
 The bank had vowed it would stop financing "military-style" weapons 
		during Remington's bankruptcy, after a former student of a Parkland, 
		Florida, high school massacred 17 people with an assault rifle in 
		February 2018.
 
 Whitebox bought Bank of America's $43.2 million portion of a $193 
		million asset-backed loan to Remington at a discount to its face value, 
		one of the sources said. That left six other banks still participating 
		in the loan.
 
 Whitebox doubled down on its investment this spring, helping Remington 
		refinance the asset-backed loan, the sources said. The loan, which 
		Remington arranged as part of its bankruptcy last year, had a three-year 
		maturity, and it is not clear why Remington pursued the refinancing.
 
 The loan that WhiteBox extended has dibs on Remington's assets, 
		protecting Whitebox in any future debt restructuring, one of the sources 
		said.
 
 Whitebox is now the only holder of that loan, that source added.
 
 Whitebox declined to comment.
 
 Previously, Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo & Co, as well as regional 
		banks Synovus Financial Corp, Regions Financial Corp, Fifth Third 
		Bancorp and BB&T Corp, had held portions of the loan.
 
		
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			A man aims a Remington firearm at the annual National Rifle 
			Association (NRA) meeting in Dallas, Texas, U.S., May 4, 2018. 
			REUTERS/Adrees Latif - RC19E76FC3D0 
            
			 
A Wells Fargo spokesman declined to comment specifically on Remington, but said 
"the bank has not picked a side in the gun violence prevention debate like some 
of its big bank peers." 
"We do not believe that the American public wants banks to decide which legal 
products consumers can and cannot buy," the Wells Fargo spokesman said.
 Deutsche Bank, Bank of America, Regions Financial, Synovus Financial, Fifth 
Third and BB&T all declined to comment. Remington did not respond to a request 
for comment.
 
Some 30 potential lenders turned down Remington for bankruptcy financing in 
2017, many citing public backlash against firearms as the reason, according to a 
bankruptcy court document at the time.
 Private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management LP, which lost control of 
Remington in the bankruptcy, had promised to divest the company following the 
Sandy Hook shooting, but ended up only allowing some of its buyout fund 
investors to exit their position.
 
JPMorgan Asset Management and Franklin Templeton Investments, which were 
previously Remington's biggest creditors, became its owners following the 
bankruptcy.
 WHITEBOX ASSETS
 
 Whitebox has not financed a gunmaker other than Remington, one of the sources 
said. The hedge fund has been stepping up its bets on distressed debt, and has 
been involved in the restructuring of Puerto Rico's debt, department store 
Sears' bankruptcy and gaming company Caesars Entertainment Corp.
 
 Whitebox's longest-standing fund has seen annualized returns of more than 16% 
since inception, according to one of the sources. Its founder, Andy Redleaf, 
stepped down this year, passing the baton to senior portfolio managers Rob Vogel 
and Paul Twitchell.
 
 
 Remington still makes AR-15-style weapons that are lightweight and known for 
their "hair-splitting" accuracy, according to its website. Some of the guns are 
marketed for hunters of coyotes, foxes and bobcats.
 
 The gun company continues to face a challenging retail environment, with one of 
its biggest outlets for sales, Walmart Inc, saying this year it would stop 
selling ammunition for handguns and some assault-style rifles in its stores.
 
 (Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Additional reporting by Matt 
Scuffham and Imani Moise in New York; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Leslie 
Adler)
 
				 
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