First Brands fraud allegations expose asset-based lending vulnerabilities as Fed signals moderate credit risks
The week ending November 09, 2025, delivered a watershed moment for middle market lending as First Brands Group’s bankruptcy exploded into allegations of systematic fraud involving hundreds of millions—potentially billions—of dollars in misappropriated funds, while the Federal Reserve’s Financial Stability Report identified moderate vulnerabilities concentrated in privately held firms and a separate Fed survey showed the strongest improvement in business loan demand from mid-sized firms in nearly three years.
First Brands lawsuit reveals alleged $700 million fraud scheme
First Brands Group’s new management filed explosive fraud allegations against founder Patrick James on November 4, accusing him of orchestrating a multibillion-dollar scheme that left the auto parts company insolvent with over $10 billion in debt.¹ The lawsuit, filed by restructuring consultants at Alvarez & Marsal who took control of the company, alleged James “misappropriated hundreds of millions (if not billions) of dollars from First Brands” to fund a lavish lifestyle including 17 exotic cars, seven homes in locations including Malibu and the Hamptons, and expenses exceeding $500,000 for a “celebrity chef” in 2025 alone.²
According to interim CEO Charles Moore, James “routinely and regularly” diverted cash from First Brands to himself and affiliated entities, with over $700 million transferred between 2018 and 2025—the majority flowing out between 2023 and 2025.³ The complaint detailed how approximately $12 billion moved through a “slush fund” called Bowery Finance II, controlled by James, from 2022 to 2025, including transactions involving James’ family trust and related entities.⁴
The forensic audit by Alvarez & Marsal uncovered systematic manipulation of invoices to secure financing. In one instance cited in court filings, a sales invoice that initially showed $179.84 was later altered to $9,271.25—fifty times the original amount.⁵ The company allegedly submitted fraudulent invoices to secure at least $2.3 billion in off-balance-sheet financing liabilities, with amounts listed “not accurately reflecting a customer’s order” and in many cases standing at ten or more times higher than actual orders.⁶
First Brands’ debt structure, revealed in bankruptcy court, included approximately $6.1 billion in on-balance-sheet obligations, $2.3 billion in off-balance-sheet financing that cannot be located, $800 million in supply chain finance liabilities, and an additional $2.3 billion in factoring liabilities—totaling debt estimates ranging from $10 billion to as high as $50 billion.⁷ The company admitted to lenders shortly before the bankruptcy filing that special purpose vehicles “supposed to always have cash in their bank accounts” had “no cash in them.”⁸
Federal probe and independent examiner sought
The U.S. Trustee, the federal watchdog for corporate bankruptcies, joined creditor demands for an independent investigation, citing “serious allegations of fraud, dishonesty, incompetence, misconduct, or mismanagement” in court filings requesting expedited appointment of a bankruptcy examiner.⁹ The Trustee’s office, in filings dated October 16, asked the bankruptcy judge to accelerate the hearing from November 17 to October 29 given the magnitude of potential misconduct.¹⁰
Lender Raistone Capital demanded an independent examiner to probe the missing $2.3 billion, arguing the company’s internal investigation “is woefully insufficient given the magnitude of potential misconduct at issue.”¹¹ Federal prosecutors launched a criminal investigation, Bloomberg reported in October, as the alleged double-pledging of collateral threatens to create a creditor battle in bankruptcy court.¹²
A First Brands spokesperson categorically denied the allegations on behalf of James, characterizing the lawsuit as “baseless and speculative” and stating James “has always conducted himself ethically and is committed to doing everything he can to support First Brands’ stakeholders during the restructuring process.”¹³
Wall Street exposure creates asset-based lending crisis
Major financial institutions face significant exposure through First Brands’ complex financing structures. Jefferies Financial Group holds $715 million in receivables through its Leucadia Asset Management funds, invested in receivables due from companies including Walmart, AutoZone, and NAPA.¹⁴ In bankruptcy filings, Jefferies noted that First Brands indicated “its special advisors were investigating whether receivables had been turned over to third-party factors upon receipt and whether receivables may have been factored more than once.”¹⁵
UBS O’Connor’s working capital finance fund held 30% exposure to First Brands, while Millennium Management took a $100 million writedown.¹⁶ Onset Financial, which led a $1.9 billion equipment financing arrangement dedicated to purchasing and leasing inventory and equipment to First Brands, expressed shock at the alleged fraud, stating “we will continue to vigorously assert our claims and defend our position in this bankruptcy.”¹⁷
The collapse has prompted asset-backed lenders to accelerate implementation of enhanced verification protocols. Industry sources report lenders are moving from periodic to continuous collateral monitoring, deploying AI-powered invoice verification systems, and increasing field exam frequency particularly for automotive-related borrowers.¹⁸ Advance rates have compressed to 80-85% on receivables and 45-50% on inventory as lenders implement more rigorous third-party verification standards.¹⁹
Federal Reserve identifies moderate vulnerabilities in middle market
The Federal Reserve’s Financial Stability Report, released November 7, assessed overall financial system vulnerabilities as moderate, with total business and household debt-to-GDP at its lowest level in over two decades.²⁰ However, the report highlighted specific concerns for middle market lenders: while publicly traded firms maintained robust debt-servicing capacity, capacity for small businesses and risky privately held firms continued to decline.
The report specifically cited “isolated bankruptcies of an auto parts supplier and a subprime auto lender as examples of risks from opaque off-balance-sheet funding, potentially amplifying spillovers to banks and nonbanks”—a clear reference to First Brands and Tricolor Holdings.²¹ This direct Fed acknowledgment elevates concerns about transparency in asset-based lending structures from operational issues to systemic financial stability risks.
Private credit growth slowed, with interest coverage ratios for borrowers improving but remaining low. Small business loan originations held steady through mid-2025, but banks tightened standards, pushing interest rates near historical highs since 2008.²² Short-term delinquencies rose modestly but remained low, though consumer delinquencies on auto and credit cards stayed above pre-pandemic levels while mortgage delinquencies remained subdued.²³
The report identified near-term risks including policy uncertainty (cited by 61% of surveyed contacts), geopolitical risks (50%), higher long-term rates (48%), persistent inflation (43%), and potential AI-driven asset price declines (30%)—all factors that could strain middle market refinancing capacity and credit supply.²⁴
Loan demand strengthens for mid-sized firms despite credit tightening
A Federal Reserve survey released November 3 revealed business loan demand from large and mid-sized U.S. firms strengthened by the most in about three years during Q3 2025.²⁵ The improvement followed a period when demand had “cratered earlier in the year in the face of significant policy shifts,” particularly around tariff policies, before improving as uncertainty eased.²⁶
Banks reported 5-10% net shares tightened standards on commercial and industrial loans to firms of all sizes, but this represented a slowdown from earlier in 2025.²⁷ Demand for C&I loans from small firms remained essentially unchanged, while demand from large and middle-market firms showed significant strengthening—with approximately 12% of banks reporting strong demand versus 30% reporting weak demand in the prior quarter.²⁸
Banks reported being “more likely to approve C&I loan applications from both large and small firms with low trade exposures, and less likely to approve C&I loan applications from firms of all sizes with high trade exposures.”²⁹ This trade exposure differentiation creates opportunities for middle market lenders willing to serve borrowers with international supply chain exposure that banks find less attractive.
Goldman Sachs forecasts December rate cut amid employment cooling
Goldman Sachs Research, in analysis published November 4, maintained its forecast for a December Federal Reserve rate cut despite Fed Chair Powell’s hawkish press conference following the October FOMC meeting.³⁰ Chief U.S. economist David Mericle noted that labor market data are “unlikely to send a convincingly reassuring message” by December, with signs that weakness in the U.S. job market “is genuine.”³¹
The forecast assumes two additional 25-basis-point cuts in March and June 2026, bringing the terminal rate to 3.0-3.25%.³² For middle market floating-rate borrowers carrying debt at SOFR plus 525-588 basis points, potential rate relief provides modest benefit, though spreads remain elevated compared to the 2019-2021 period when SOFR floors at 1% were common.
Asset-based lending market positioning intensifies
The First Brands collapse accelerates structural shifts in middle market finance. The global asset-based lending market, estimated at $32 trillion and projected to reach $9.2 trillion by 2029 according to industry sources, offers diversification beyond concentrated corporate lending.³³ Asset-based lenders benefit from banks’ continued retreat from marginal credits due to regulatory constraints, though the First Brands fraud demonstrates that collateral-backed structures require rigorous verification rather than providing inherent safety.
Invoice factoring markets continue strong growth trajectories, with the global market projected to reach $5.73 trillion in 2025, growing at 8.6% CAGR.³⁴ However, First Brands’ alleged double-pledging of receivables and systematic invoice manipulation underscore the imperative for continuous monitoring and independent verification rather than relying on borrower-provided collateral certificates.
Turnaround market prepares for increased activity
The combination of weakening debt-servicing capacity among privately held firms, public fraud allegations exposing due diligence failures, and widening performance dispersion creates conditions for elevated restructuring activity. Registration opened for the 2026 TMA Distressed Investing Conference (February 17-20 in Las Vegas), signaling industry preparation for a more active distressed cycle despite overall economic resilience.³⁵
The bifurcation between quality credits accessing improved loan demand and struggling privately held firms facing capacity constraints creates selective opportunities for turnaround professionals. First Brands’ allegations involving “slush funds” and off-balance-sheet vehicles highlight the importance of specialized forensic capabilities in workout situations.
Items to consider
Implement continuous collateral monitoring: First Brands’ alleged systematic invoice manipulation for seven years before detection demonstrates that periodic audits are insufficient. Asset-based lenders should transition to real-time verification systems using AI-powered invoice validation and continuous field exams, particularly for receivables factoring and inventory finance.
Verify off-balance-sheet arrangements independently: The Fed’s explicit warning about opaque funding structures, combined with First Brands’ $2.3 billion in missing off-balance-sheet financing, requires lenders to conduct independent verification of all special purpose vehicles, factoring arrangements, and supply chain finance structures. Third-party audits should replace reliance on borrower certifications.
Assess concentration in automotive supply chains: First Brands operated across spark plugs, wipers, filters, and brake parts with major retail relationships at Walmart, AutoZone, and NAPA. The collapse exposes concentration risks in automotive aftermarket supply chains, suggesting enhanced due diligence for similar middle market borrowers with retail concentration.
Differentiate on trade exposure screening: Banks’ increased willingness to approve loans for firms with low trade exposures, while rejecting high-exposure applicants, creates a defined opportunity set for alternative lenders. Companies with international supply chains or tariff-sensitive inputs require premium pricing but represent available deal flow as banks retreat.
Prepare for fraud-driven workouts: First Brands allegations involving $12 billion flowing through founder-controlled “slush funds” suggest more middle market frauds may surface as economic pressure increases. Turnaround advisors and asset-based lenders should enhance fraud detection capabilities and develop protocols for situations involving systematic misrepresentation.
Monitor small business credit quality deterioration: The Fed identified continued decline in debt-servicing capacity for small businesses and risky privately held firms, despite improving demand from larger middle market companies. This divergence requires portfolio segmentation and potentially tighter underwriting standards for sub-$50 million revenue borrowers.
Conclusion
The week ending November 09, 2025, represents an inflection point for middle market lending, where First Brands’ alleged multibillion-dollar fraud intersected with Federal Reserve warnings about opaque off-balance-sheet financing to expose fundamental vulnerabilities in asset-based lending verification practices. The filing of fraud allegations on November 4—detailing $700 million in allegedly misappropriated funds, systematically manipulated invoices inflated fifty-fold, and $2.3 billion in missing receivables—transformed what initially appeared as an isolated bankruptcy into a crisis of confidence for collateral-backed lending structures.
The Federal Reserve’s explicit citation of an “auto parts supplier” bankruptcy in its November 7 Financial Stability Report elevates these concerns from operational failures to systemic financial stability risks. When the central bank specifically warns about “risks from opaque off-balance-sheet funding, potentially amplifying spillovers to banks and nonbanks,” middle market lenders face regulatory scrutiny that will reshape due diligence requirements regardless of individual institution exposure to First Brands.
Yet the week simultaneously delivered the strongest improvement in loan demand from mid-sized firms in nearly three years, creating a paradox: genuine middle market opportunities exist for lenders willing to implement rigorous verification while competitors retreat. The Fed survey’s finding that banks favor low-trade-exposure borrowers creates defined market segmentation, with quality credits accessing improved bank lending while marginal borrowers seek alternative capital.
Success in this environment demands reconciling opposing realities—capitalizing on improved middle market demand while implementing verification protocols sophisticated enough to detect systematic fraud that evaded Wall Street due diligence for years. First Brands allegedly operated fraudulently from at least 2018 through 2025, securing billions in financing from sophisticated institutions including Jefferies, UBS, and multiple banks. The failure of traditional field exams, borrowing base certificates, and periodic audits to detect invoice manipulation and double-pledging demonstrates that existing asset-based lending practices require fundamental restructuring toward continuous monitoring, AI-powered verification, and independent third-party validation.
The turnaround market positioning for increased activity, evidenced by TMA conference preparations and Fed warnings about weakening privately held firm capacity, suggests restructuring professionals with forensic fraud detection capabilities will find robust opportunity. As Goldman Sachs forecasts December rate cuts amid employment cooling, middle market participants face an environment where monetary accommodation provides modest relief but credit quality differentiation determines survival. Lenders who viewed collateral as providing inherent safety must now recognize that sophisticated fraud can compromise even hard assets, requiring verification rigor that matches or exceeds traditional cash flow underwriting discipline.
Footnotes
¹ First Brands Sues Founder for Allegedly Pilfering Firm Funds
² First Brands founder accused of looting company
³ First Brands Sues Founder for Allegedly Pilfering Firm Funds
⁴ First Brands accuses Founder and former CEO of multibillion-dollar fraud
⁵ First Brands founder accused of looting company
⁶ First Brands accuses founder of receivables and inventory finance fraud
⁷ First Brands accuses founder of receivables and inventory finance fraud
⁹ First Brands Alleged Multibillion-Dollar Fraud
¹⁰ US Seeks Independent Bankruptcy Probe of First Brands Downfall
¹¹ First Brands Alleged Multibillion-Dollar Fraud
¹² First Brands founder accused of looting company
¹³ First Brands accuses former CEO of misappropriating millions, perhaps billions
¹⁴ Recent fraud allegations, bankruptcies place emphasis on controls
¹⁵ Recent fraud allegations, bankruptcies place emphasis on controls
¹⁷ Recent fraud allegations, bankruptcies place emphasis on controls
²⁰ Financial Stability Report – November 2025
²¹ Financial Stability Report – November 2025
²² Financial Stability Report – November 2025
²³ Financial Stability Report – November 2025
²⁴ Financial Stability Report – November 2025
²⁵ Loan demand from US mid- and large firms improves, Fed survey shows
²⁶ Loan demand from US mid- and large firms improves, Fed survey shows
²⁷ Fed survey: Lending standards tightened for commercial loans in Q3
³⁰ The Fed Is Forecast to Cut Rates in December as Employment Cools
³¹ The Fed Is Forecast to Cut Rates in December as Employment Cools
³² The Fed Is Forecast to Cut Rates in December as Employment Cools
³³ Top 10 Asset-Based Finance Deals of 2025







