BDC cuts ties with B-D

SEP 01, 2013
A nascent nontraded business development company has cut ties with its outside broker-dealer manager, citing a lack of financial stability at the broker-dealer. The VII Peaks-KBR Co-Optivist Income BDC II Inc. said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Aug. 23 that its board had decided to split from its investment adviser, VII Peaks-KBR BDC Advisor II LLC. The BDC's board retained VII Peaks but terminated KBR as the investment adviser. The new name of the BDC, which has $18 million in assets under management, is VII Peaks Co-Optivist Income BDC II Inc. Its net asset value per share is $8.83, according to its most recent quarterly report. The current offering price is $10.15 per share. KBR, through the broker-dealer KBR Capital Markets LLC, distributed the BDC. BDCs are typically closed-end investment companies that invest in debt and equity of private companies. Nontraded BDCs currently are one of the most popular alternative investments sold through independent broker-dealers. Yields can be attractive due to BDCs' exposure to high credit risks that are amplified by leverage, according to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc.

BDC SALES BOOMING

According to investment bank Robert A. Stanger & Co. Inc., nontraded BDC sales have been booming this year. Sales of nonlisted BDCs during the first half reached $2.1 billion, a 47.2% increase over the same period of 2012. The biggest seller over the first six months was FS Investment Corp. II, which raised $827.5 million over that time. VII Peaks Capital has $46.2 million in total assets, according to its Form ADV. SEC filings show that VII Peaks and KBR had four other offerings, but those were private and not publicly registered. The BDC is actively seeking a new broker-dealer as a distributor, said Gurpreet Chandhoke, chairman and chief executive. “We are moving on from KBR,” Mr. Chandhoke said. “We terminated the advisory agreement. We do the investment management, and KBR was purely a distributor.” He cited financial issues at KBR as a concern. “We need to have a stable distribution partner,” he said. According to a filing with the SEC, KBR posted a net loss of $1.2 million last year. Vinay Kumar, the owner of KBR Capital Markets, could not be reached for comment last week.

Latest News

Fed's Bowman pushes for lighter-touch AI oversight at smaller firms
Fed's Bowman pushes for lighter-touch AI oversight at smaller firms

Supervision vice chair speaks following recent launch of AI adoption practices by regulators.

Why fixed income still belongs in your clients' portfolios
Why fixed income still belongs in your clients' portfolios

In an era of AI euphoria and market FOMO, getting back to basics with fixed income may be the most contrarian and most important move advisors can make.

Voya expands advisor managed accounts to add private market assets
Voya expands advisor managed accounts to add private market assets

Voya Financial adds private equity, credit and real estate options to its AMA program, building on support for looser federal investment rules in retirement accounts.

With executives leaving, Osaic’s Reid now in the spotlight
With executives leaving, Osaic’s Reid now in the spotlight

Shannon Reid, president of Osaic and the network’s number two executive, has plenty of challenges, industry executives said.

Investors sue crypto fund and platform, alleging $1.5 million never returned
Investors sue crypto fund and platform, alleging $1.5 million never returned

Auditors flagged the commingling. The COO allegedly knew. Investors kept getting the pitch

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.