Rodman & Renshaw is on verge of shutting

SEP 16, 2012
Rodman & Renshaw LLC, once a leading investment bank for small emerging-growth companies, could shut down. In a regulatory filing last week, the broker-dealer informed the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. that it is no longer in compliance with the Securities and Exchange Commission's net-capital rules. Falling under regulatory-net-capital levels typically is a broker-dealer's death knell, though on rare occasions, firms manage to bounce back and remain open. In the SEC filing, Rodman & Renshaw's parent company, Direct Markets Holdings Corp., said that the broker-dealer “would cease conducting its securities business, other than liquidating transactions, unless and until it can achieve compliance” with net-capital rules.

LOOKING AT OPTIONS

The broker-dealer is considering terminating its license by filing a broker-dealer withdrawal form with Finra, according to the filing. It also is considering selling certain assets. Executives with Rodman & Renshaw, including chief executive Edward Rubin, didn't return calls seeking comment. Broker-dealers of all stripes have been struggling to maintain net-capital reserves since the financial crisis of 2008, with hundreds failing or simply shutting down since then. Firms must have a minimum amount of cash on hand to remain open for business, and many have been unable to do so. Over the past five years, Finra has reported a 13% decline in the number of broker-dealers, with 4,370 up and running last month, versus 5,005 at the end of 2007. Rodman & Renshaw has suffered pronounced turmoil over the past few months. In May, the parent company changed its name to Direct Markets Holdings Corp. from Rodman & Renshaw Capital Group Inc., signaling a shift in focus to its Direct Markets platform, which links small public companies making secondary offerings with investors. But the company's stock price failed to recover from a yearlong slide. Shares were trading last Thursday at a little more than 8 cents, compared with $1.28 a year ago. Last month, Finra fined the broker-dealer $315,000 for “supervisory and other violations related to the interaction between the firm's research and investment banking functions.” [email protected] Twitter: @bdnewsguy

Latest News

Mercer Advisors lands third-biggest deal to date with Full Sail Capital
Mercer Advisors lands third-biggest deal to date with Full Sail Capital

With over 600 clients, the $71 billion RIA acquirer's latest partner marks its second transaction in Oklahoma.

Fintech bytes: FP Alpha rolls out estate insights feature
Fintech bytes: FP Alpha rolls out estate insights feature

Also, wealth.com enters Commonwealth's tech stack, while Tifin@work deepens an expanded partnership.

Morgan Stanley, Atria job cut details emerge
Morgan Stanley, Atria job cut details emerge

Back office workers and support staff are particularly vulnerable when big broker-dealers lay off staff.

Envestnet taps Atria alum Sean Meighan to sharpen RIA focus
Envestnet taps Atria alum Sean Meighan to sharpen RIA focus

The fintech giant is doubling down on its strategy to reach independent advisors through a newly created leadership role.

LPL, Evercore welcome West Coast breakaways
LPL, Evercore welcome West Coast breakaways

The two firms are strengthening their presence in California with advisor teams from RBC and Silicon Valley Bank.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.